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Spaulding Taylor

Lester Barnes

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Alice (Spaulding Taylor) McVeigh was born in South Korea, of American diplomats, and lived in Asia until she was 13, when the family returned to Washington D.C. After achieving a B.Mus. at the internationally acclaimed Jacobs School of Music, she came to London to study with Jacqueline du Pré and William Pleeth. Since then, she has performed with the BBC Symphony Orchestra, the Royal Philharmonic and the Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique in 44 countries.

Meanwhile, her first two contemporary novels – While the Music Lasts and Ghost Music – were published by Orion Publishing, and her first play (Beating Time) enjoyed a run at the Lewisham Theatre. The film rights to her first book were also sold, to Channel 4, but Mozart in the Jungle got there first!

The Kirkus-starred Last Star Standing, was published on 25 Feb. 2021 by Unbound. It has just been longlisted for Chanticleer's Cygnus Award.

Her Austenesque novel (Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel) is rated 10/10 in the current BookLife Award (Publishers Weekly). It has won First Place (historical fiction) in the PenCraft Book Awards 2021, gold medal (historical) in the Global Book Awards, and an Indie B.R.A.G. medallion.

Alice is married to Professor Simon McVeigh, and lives in London. They have one daughter, who just graduated from the University of Oxford, and a second home by the Mediterranean. Alice works as a London ghost writer, book editor, and writing mentor (one of her clients just won the Red Hen novella award).

She is also a powerful, if notably inaccurate, tennis player. As her daughter remarked when aged four, "My mum hits the ball farther than anybody!"

LAST STAR STANDING Cover
THRILLERS

LAST STAR STANDING

BY Spaulding Taylor • POSTED ON Feb. 18, 2021

A human rebel leads a desperate attempt against alien overlords in Taylor’s debut SF novel.

In 2067, World War III laid waste to Earth’s ecosystem, and in 2084, extraterrestrials called the Xirfell conquered the planet. Now, in 2094, the Xirfell’s King Hebdith and his minions, including alien creatures gathered from other worlds, impose despotic rule on the surviving earthlings. Despite the aliens’ vast advantage in numbers and assets, a scrappy human resistance movement has organized itself. Thirty-year-old half-Anglo, half-Indigenous Aiden Tenten has been part of the rebellion since his days attending Australasian Academy, where he was recruited for three major qualities: “an outstanding brain, a stubborn spirit, and a determination to make a difference,” and also because of—or despite—his reckless confidence and craving for the spotlight. When an unknown source disclosed his affair with Ravene, the king’s half-human, half-Xirfell daughter, Aiden was expelled from the academy. Since then, he’s been a successful rebel operative, but he’s apparently been betrayed again. As he languishes in prison with a death sentence, the Xirfell question and torture him; the seductive Ravene even conducts one of the interrogation sessions. Nevertheless, he manages, with help from allies, to embarrass the regime by foiling the public execution of Leelack, a breathtaking mermaidlike creature who managed to infiltrate the Xirfell’s high council. Aiden also escapes and is tapped for a crucial mission in which he must disguise himself as an enormous alien enforcer, get close to the king, and assassinate him. He won’t have to do it alone, but the odds are against his little team—and the betrayer in the resistance is still at large.

Over the course of this novel, Taylor tempers his bleak, post-apocalyptic fictional world with Aiden’s energetic narration and darkly comic humor, as when Aiden, in his alien disguise, finds himself seduced again by the unwitting Ravene: “But, before you write me off as the feeblest—if possibly the sexiest—operative in rebel history,” he says, “I was also hatching a back-up plan.” The overall tone of the narrative recalls Nick Harkaway’s novel The Gone-Away World (2008), but it does so without ever feeling derivative. The action scenes are excitingly unpredictable, and they also have an emotional element, as brave, goodhearted characters face mortal danger from truly cruel and evil beings. Similarly, Taylor handles Aiden’s growth toward humble self-knowledge in a moving and believable manner; as self-centered as he’s been, he’s also been taking care to note the examples of others who’ve found true greatness—“that kernel deep inside, that immortal core” whose recognition “can merge, from all our separate selves, into the person we are meant to be.” His later mission gives him the chance to move past his restless desire for fame and become his truer self. The book is also a standout for its inventive array of alien species; for example, Pavlina Dafina Evangelija, a tiny and fuzzy “gromeline,” is an intelligent and fearless creature who provides essential help for the rebels’ mission.

A thoroughly entertaining adventure with imaginative action and an appealing hero.

Pub Date: Feb. 18, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-78965-097-6

Page count: 300pp

Publisher: Unbound

Review Posted Online: March 12, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2021

Awards, Press & Interests

Day job

ghost writer, book editor, cellist

Favorite author

Jane Austen

Favorite book

Emma

Favorite word

gruntled (P.G. Wodehouse)

Hometown

London, by way of Seoul, Bangkok, Singapore, Myanmar and McLean, Virginia

Unexpected skill or talent

professional cellist

LAST STAR STANDING: Kirkus Star

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