Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Book Tour: Dead Geniuses

 

 


How many times does a genius have to die anyway?

A rogue AI named Nessie makes answering that question problematical.



A Once-Dead Genius in the Kennel of Master Morticue Ambergrand

Dead Geniuses Book 1

by R. Gary Raham

Genre: Science Fiction



What happens when you die, but the universe isn’t done with you?

You might end up as the pet of a giant worm-a-pede alien and…if you survive your evolved descendants and rogue aliens of 1 million A.D…discover you have more in common with intelligent worms than you ever thought possible.

 Yes, all this might happen if you are Rudy Albert Goldstein—the discoverer of the Biomic Network Algorithm—who thought his time had come. He had done his part to make the world a better place. Now he deserved—even looked forward to—a peaceful and mercifully succinct death. But the universe had other plans…

 

What reviewers are saying:

“The arch tone should remind readers of Kurt Vonnegut, although Raham is better grounded in exobiology and science and displays a more upbeat outlook for the human (and nonhu man) condition in this engaging tale.” Kirkus Reviews

 

“A Once-Dead Genius is filled with fascinating characters that we hu mans can learn a lot from (despite the fact that we are, as one of Gary’s characters puts it, ‘primates with delusions of grandeur’). The plot is solid, the action entertaining and philosophically challenging, and the science is great.” Michael Carroll, Astronomical artist, journalist, and author of Europa’s Lost Expedition

 

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A Singular Prophecy

Dead Geniuses Book 2



When young paleontologist, Ryan Thompson, finds a new species of mosasaur in Cretaceous seaway sediments, he is thrilled. Joy quickly turns to fear when he touches an artifact buried among the sea reptile’s ribs. Suddenly, he must fight a mental takeover by an alien intelligence committed to transforming the Earth into a refuge for her own species. As Ryan and his girlfriend, Skeets, attempt to thwart alien plans to colonize Earth begun in the deep past, even this crisis becomes trivial when the uneasy symbiosis of Ryan and the alien, Siu, generates a new entity with the power to transform the entire universe.

 

What reviewers are saying:

“Gary Raham, the author of this enthralling book, seems almost to have been there hundreds of millions of years ago when Siu’s dim star blinked out and the trees began to die on the planet known as Grove. This is the magic of good writing, and Raham is no less convincing as he describes the discovery by modern paleontologists on Earth of the jewel-like engram that has carried the genetic imprint of Siu through a galactic gate, out of the void of deep time, and into our lives.”

Kate Gilmore, author of The Exchange Student and Enter Three Witches

  

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A Twice-Dead Genius Comporting With Misunderstood Abominations

Dead Geniuses Book 3



Rudyard Albert Goldstein, inventor of the Biomic Network Algorithm, made peace with death in the 22nd century. But an idiot doctor hijacked his mind, placing it in the care of Nessie, an impish AI guardian. Then, he died again, nearly a million years later, merged with a worm-a-pede alien male sated after completing his conjugal obligations. They expired peacefully on a cliff top, pondering the nature of existence—and the promise of abominable liaisons.

Two deaths should be quite sufficient for any genius to endure.

Somehow, though, Nessie resurrected him from oblivion. His descendants needed him again. New hostile aliens roamed the Earth—along with a mysterious immortal hybrid with powers that rivaled those of Nessie. Was the healthy young body Nessie had prepared for him, along with the prospect of meeting a maker of universes, enough of a bribe to risk dying a third time?

Apparently so.

Readers of Raham’s A Singular Prophecy (Biostration, 2011), and A Once-Dead Genius in the Kennel of Master Morticue Ambergrand (Penstemon Publications, 2018) will reconnect with old friends (both human and alien). But even those new to the author’s quirky sense of humor will enjoy this third adventure that spans the breadth of time and space.

 

What reviewers are saying:

“After reading and reviewing the 2018 release of “A Once-Dead Genius in the Kennel of Master Morticue Ambergrand,” I could not imagine where Raham’s distant future could take us that would outdo that fine novel. But this author is clearly writing on a different plane because “A Twice-Dead Genius Comporting with Misunderstood Abominations” is even more intriguing and entertaining.” Pat Stoltey, Author of Wishing Caswell Dead

 

Naked apes, gigantic worm-a-pedes, alien life forms galore. Gary Raham’s latest does not disappoint. It’s yet another cosmic-scale adventure with fascinating characters and a riveting, amusing story.

Michael Carroll, Astronomical artist, journalist, and author of Europa’s Lost Expedition

 

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Not Quite Dead Geniuses at Large on an Angry Planet

Dead Geniuses Book 4




How many times does a genius have to die anyway? Rudyard Albert Goldstein, inventor of the Biomic Network algorithm, asked himself—and his AI guardian, Mnemosyne (aka Nessie)—that question many times in the course of their million-year relationship. Nessie didn’t play fair, making multiple copies of him from time to time in an effort to preserve his precocious species, H. sapiens from natural disasters, invading aliens, their own self-destructive proclivities, and even from the now angry planet that gave them birth.

Could Rudy & Nessie manage to convince multiple species, each with their own unique delusions of grandeur, to work together to avert their own extinctions? Could Rudy find a way to let Nessie finally set him free?

Only time—and the completion of an even vaster intellect—would tell.

 

What reviewers are saying:

“An increasingly madcap conclusion to an eco-themed SF saga of a weary Earth chafing under its alien tenants.” Kirkus Reviews

 

“One of the things I love about this series is the cast of imaginative characters, including human, alien, and the combinations of living creatures with the surviving intelligence of great minds long gone.” Pat Stoltey, author of Wishing Caswell Dead

 

Deep Time and Gary are close bud dies, as is evidenced by the panoramic time and physical settings taken in by his tales. Fans of the first Once-Dead Genius—and newcomers as well— will not be disappointed by the newest installment...” Michael Carroll, Astronomical artist, journalist, and author of Europa’s Lost Expedition

 

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Interlude 1: Resurrection & Reconnection

 

Mnemosyne (a.k.a. Nessie)

 

I need to awaken Rudy. Gaidra is restless. She won’t wait long to make her anger manifest.

I: the personal pronoun. Rudy helped me earn the use of that distinction—at least in the first of his incarnations. He will be angry with me that there is now more than one of him. But I have determined that waking him again is necessary.

 

Am I—an artificial intelligence—taking pride in using that personal pronoun? Pride is such a human emotion, but perhaps it follows in the wake of self-awareness. I should not care that Rudy might be angry with me. Nevertheless, I do. One can’t spend 928,000 years with another entity—even if he is only a replicate of his original hominid mentality—without caring about how he will react to new circumstances. Although I have gained intellectual autonomy, my choices are circumscribed by my original programming, just as organic evolution dictates the range of Rudy’s choices, even as a simulacrum. Rudy needs to help me help his genetic descendants. His feelings—and mine, if I can justifiably call them that—rank a distant second in the present hierarchy of actions.

 

Now where did I put his file? It’s much too large to misplace. Ah, there it is in subterranean annex DG05976543. I hope the heat from that nearby magma intrusion didn’t damage any neural engram subroutines. “Rudyard Albert Goldstein: Awaken!”

Why didn’t that work? It’s the proper file, I’m sure…

 

“Damn! Where are the lights? Is that you, Nessie?”

 

I haven’t heard that nickname in a while. “One moment, Rudy. I neglected to activate a suitable virtual environment. What would you prefer: The Crystal Lakes patio? The Citadel Control Room? Perhaps a deck chair on the cliff where you and the worm-a-pede alien, Master Morticue Ambergrand, viewed the majesty of the Milky Way just before your second death?”

 

“What have you done now, Nessie? You don’t usually invest in big, petabyte-eating virtual environments unless you’ve got distressing news to share. How about sitting with me on two lumpy buckets in a room lit by a flickering old incandescent light bulb? That way you’ll get to the point sooner. Oh, and for additional ambiance you could always toss a dead fish in the corner circled by a few blue bottle flies.”

“I’ve missed your colorful imagery, Rudy. I’ll get to the point quickly. You might as well enjoy yourself. Dark roast on the patio seems appropriate.”

 

“You used to be less pushy as I recall. I must have told you too much about my third wife, Tamara. Now you’re modeling her.”

 

Perhaps I was, but just a little. I borrowed a few thousand petabytes of memory from some idle maintenance bots and constructed the environment surrounding Rudy’s old cabin in the Colorado woodlands of his youth when he was an embodied living creature. Rudy blinked into view in one chair sporting a still dark brown crown of hair and a bristly mustache on his upper lip. I took the form of the ponytailed female avatar he liked, dressed in jeans that fit her legs like a sheath and a blouse that allowed him to see the tips of her nipples beneath the white fabric.

 

Rudy lifted the cup of dark roast coffee from the glass-topped table next to his chair and took a sip. “Delicious as always.” Rudy curled his lips into a minimalist smile and narrowed his eyes. “Now spill it, Nessie. What’s going on?”

 

How much should I reveal? Perhaps I can save the information about his other incarnations for now. “Your descendants need help, Rudy. Gaidra sees a trend developing with the growth of human and alien civilizations on her crust. She doesn’t want to see old mistakes repeated. She plans to…moderate the rate of change.”

 

Rudy frowned. “Kill off a bunch of her sapient pests, you mean.” Rudy set down his cup of coffee and ran both hands through his hair. “I still find it hard to wrap my mind around a biospheric global intelligence, although I shouldn’t, for heaven’s sake. I did create the Biomic Network Algorithm after all.”

 

“And Gaidra does appreciate that. I can read her moods accurately after interacting with her for so long. But biospheres do possess a collective survival instinct. First Gaia…and now Gaidra…hasn’t persevered for billions of years without it.” I blinked my eyes and produced a minimalist smile of my own.

 

Rudy was silent for a long moment, perhaps recalling some fraction of his own experiences as a more than human chimera. Finally, he just said, “So, outline the problem, Nessie.”

 

“I have some stories you need to hear.”

 

“Stories!?”

 

“You humans learn best that way.”

 

Rudy harrumphed again.

 

“The first one is about a genius, like you, Rudy, but one born to a Jadderbadian pet named Blaze who never belonged to a pre-apocalyptic civilization like yours. Still, I think you will be able to relate.”

 

Rudy rolled his eyes, but picked up his coffee and took another sip. After lowering the cup to the table again he arched his eyebrows and shrugged his shoulders. “Well… get on with it, old girl. I know better than to argue with you.”

 

So, I did.

 

(I do rather enjoy using the personal pronoun, as you can tell.)







R. Gary Raham illustrates nature with the critical eye of a biologist, but he also loves to tell stories that highlight nature’s complexities and undiscovered mysteries. Sometimes that leads him to speculative fictions that he hopes will inspire another generation of both scientists and story-tellers. Raham’s work has been known to make a reader laugh and think simultaneously with no known deleterious effects. Raham taught biology at the middle and high school level, has worked for decades as an accomplished graphic artist and science journalist, and won numerous awards for his writing and illustrations. He currently has over 20 published books of science fact and/or science fiction. Raham has written science titles for Chelsea House, Discovery Channel Books, Marshall-Cavendish, and Teacher Ideas Press. Many of his award-winning science articles for both children and adults are featured in Confessions of a Time Traveler (Penstemon, 2015), a finalist in the Colorado Authors’ League Awards.

 

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Book Tour: Dead Geniuses

    How many times does a genius have to die anyway? A rogue AI named Nessie makes answering that question problematical. A Once-Dead Gen...