Guide to the Ladybugs

The Ladybugs

“The Ladybugs burst onto the world stage in 1963, the head of the female invasion with their cover of Buddy Holly’s Peggy Sue. This was followed by a string of hits, most written by the band’s four members. At one point in 1965 the group held sixteen spots concurrently on Billboard’s top 100 singles chart. Releasing two to three albums a year and maintaining a grueling tour schedule kept the Ladybugs at the top, but then in 1967, weary of life on the road they moved to their studios in the Virgin Islands, where they released such cutting edge studio albums as Blessed Nobody, Platinum Dream, and the self-titled double album. Even as their last two albums were being marketed however, longstanding personality and management conflicts within the group broke it apart, and in 1970 the band split up, many believed forever. Now, five years later, hot on the heels of the Christmas release of Rebel Girls, the band makes its triumphant return to the concert stage.”

“We have confirmation that the band’s airship is now arriving at the airport. All four members are confirmed to be aboard. As everyone knows, the Ladybugs are Steffie Sin, Penny Dreadful (born Penelope Dearborn) both of Los Angeles; Ep!phanee (born Theresa Maria Bergman) of Stockholm; and Ruth De Molay, a native of the Virgin Islands. Ep!phanee and Dreadful have both released a series of successful solo albums while Sin and De Molay have released music more sporadically, the latter focusing on a successful movie career while the former has spent a great deal of time in seclusion in Switzerland.”

15% off The Voyage of the Minotaur Paperback

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Guide to the Ladybugs

History

1902 Nicola Tesla invents the transmission of energy, radio and radio-vid, and wireless telephony.

1914 The Great War begins.

1916 Anton Casimir Dilger releases “the disease”, killing 60 million.

The disease evolves into a plague targeting only males.

Worldwide male population reaches its high of 850 million.

1917 The Great War unofficially ends.

1920 Radio-vids become popular in the United States and spread to the rest of the world.

1928 Grace Coolidge becomes the first female President of the United States.

1929 The plague, and the associated costs, drive the world into a Great Depression.

1930 Male population drops to less than 200 million.

1931 The US begins a massive program of migrating male populations to enclaves in the south.

1932 Francis Perkins is elected President of the United States, eventually serving four terms.

1935 The first successful human en vitro fertilizations.

1937 Asian countries follow the US example of sending male populations to the distant south.

1943 Nicola Tesla invents a cloning process, allowing women to vat babies.

Nicola Tesla dies.

The first vat babies are born.

1944 Theresa Maria Berman (Ep!phanee) is born.

Ruth De Molay is born.

1945 Penny Dreadful is born.

1946 Steffie Sin is born

1948 Eleanor Roosevelt is elected the last President of the United States.

1950 Male population hits a low of 10 million worldwide.

European nations begin to send their male populations south.

A half hearted effort is made to move African men. Small numbers move south.

Commercial electronic brains come into use in businesses and government.

1956 The Great Science War begins.

The Science Council is formed.

1957 Tobacco is outlawed by the Science Council.

1959 The Great Science War ends.

Buddy Holly, the last of the great male Rock and Roll stars dies.

1960 Theresa Maria Bergman moves to Los Angeles, Meets Penelope Dearborn.

1961 Bergman, Dearborn, Steffie Sin, and Betty Moore found the Ladybugs.

Bergman changes her name to Ep!phanee, Moore to Betty Rocksit.

1962 The Ladybugs tour the west coast. Dearborn uses the stage name Penny Dreadful.

The Ladybugs remove Betty Rocksit as drummer and hire Ruth De Molay.

1963 The Ladybugs release their first single, Peggy Sue.

The Ladybugs release their first album: Intro.

The Science Council begins requiring monthly contributions of male genetic material.

The Science Council outlaws racial segregation.

1964 The Ladybugs first world tour.

The Ladybugs appear on the Dorothy Kilgallen Show.

The Ladybugs album NOW! is released.

1965 The Ladybugs second world tour.

Penny Dreadful legally changes her name.

The Ladybugs hold 16 simultaneous hits on the Billboard 100.

1966 The Ladybugs third and last world tour.

The Ladybugs purchase Thatch Cay in the Virgin Islands.

Laughing Pink releases their first album.

1967 Blessed Nobody is released.

The first color radio-vids are marketed.

1968 The Ladybugs double album (The Spotted Album) is released.

Ep!phanee releases her first solo album: E-Party.

Penny Dreadful releases her first solo album: Never Stop Rocking.

Steffie Sin releases her first solo album: Love Life Prayer

1969 Matching Tattoos is released.

The Thongs release their first album.

1970 Last confirmed case of the disease.

Naked is released.

1971 Ruth De Molay releases her first solo album: Left Handed Romance.

1972 Ep!phanee releases Memories of Dust

1974 Penny Dreadful releases Carpetmuncher.

Rebel Girls is released.

1975 The Present

Guide to the Ladybugs

The World

The world of the Ladybugs was our world until 1916. During what was known as The Great War, German scientist Anton Casimir Dilger had come up with a plan to keep America from joining the allies. Not content to poison American cattle with Anthrax, he had created a strain of an existing disease; some said influenza, though no one had ever identified the original. With it he had infected several cities along the east coast. Though initially killing almost sixty million men, women, and children, the disease mutated over time to affect only the males of the species. There had been more than 850 million men on earth before he began his sabotage. By 1930, there were less than 200 million, and by 1950 there were less than 10 million.

Governments sent their remaining men to enclaves in the far southern reaches of the globe where the disease didn’t seem as virulent, and there most of them remained. In the last years of his life, the great inventor Nicola Tesla, in an attempt to save the species, designed and built the baby vats, where girls were grown from their mothers’ cells. The first vat babies were born just after Tesla’s death in 1943.

In 1956, the remaining totalitarian nations tried to expand across the world, taking advantage of the chaos caused by the disease. Democratic nations quickly allied to defeat the dictators. The war brought together the now mostly female nations as they had never been before, resulting in a world government. This new world was led by the Science Council, a meritocracy with its capital in Brussels. With an international army known as the Peace Force and an international police force called the Science Police, the new world set about to rebuild civilization. Several reminders of the war remain however. The San Joaquin Channel, the fourteen mile wide strip of sea water which separates the island of California from the rest of North America was once known as the San Joaquin Valley. The area around Portland remains caught in a permanent thunderstorm resulting in unrelenting rain for more than twenty years. And a good portion of Florida simply no longer exists.

Even in a new and strange world, memories of the old world lingered on. Women in America gathered to watch baseball games played by the Atlanta Belles or the New York Pixies, while women in Europe watched football games. Hot dogs became a staple in the north. With neither a Civil Rights Movement nor a twentieth century Women’s Movement, some old ideas hung on. Even though men had been gone from most of society for years, there was the tradition around the world of women not going out unescorted by a man. Some women took to dressing and acting the part of men. These faux-men were tolerated and even encouraged. With no men to escort women, someone just had to take their place. Sex in some ways was really just an extension of that, but nobody talked about it. Women pretended that faux-men were men and for the most part, treated them that way. But women who openly had sexual relationships with other women, or at least with other women who looked like women, were ostracized.

Meanwhile in the south, Men lived together in enclaves in Cape Horn, Tasmania, or New Zealand. For the most part living in dormitories, they watched the world develop and change without them. Rugby became the most popular sport in the south and Tacos the most common food. By the late sixties, the disease seemed to have run its course, and men began to slowly move back to the north. Those that did often became the center of polygamous marriages in countries where there were thousands of women for each man.

Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Sorceress – 5 Star Review on iBooks

Review by A reader: 5 Stars

This is a book that will keep you reading and give you a good chuckle.  A highly recommended book.  Read the entire series.

Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess – 5 Star Review at Manybooks

Review by mrockel: 5 Stars

A brief tale of low magic and high skulduggery, set square in the world of pointy-eared elves and short-arsed goblins. Our self aggrandising hero has a genuine way with words and if you like the genre to be touched with humour this for you.

http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?t=citofama-20&o=1&p=8&l=bpl&asins=0557077419&fc1=000000&IS2=1&lt1=_blank&m=amazon&lc1=0000FF&bc1=000000&bg1=FFFFFF&f=ifr

More His Robot Girlfriend Reviews at Smashwords

Review by: Kevin Lewis on Nov. 12, 2010 : 5 Stars

This book is very well written, with likable characters. It’s a quick fun read for when you are pressed for time. It could use a bit more rounding out, to make the story a little fuller, but still very enjoyable. Thank you for sharing your work with us, and keep up the good work!!

Review by: Talisman on Nov. 11, 2010 : 5 Stars

This book is the first book that i read on my new kobo e-reader. I have to admit the story was real engaging from the very beginning. And I am glad that the story did not follow standard android type plots and moral dilemma’s (Ok maybe the main character had a little guilt about her but not much) With that said the ending was great but very fast, I am with a few questions at the end- Perhaps intended by the author – the basic question i think is it different to fall in love with a “hive” robot- or one with individual quirks and free-will?

Review by: Charles Brentner on Oct. 11, 2010 : 5 Stars

I enjoyed this story. What man hasn’t wanted to have the perfect fantasy woman at one time or another. I agree that a sequel would be nice. The characters are well established in “His Robot Girlfriend” and it would be interesting to explore more of what could happen in the world that Mr. Allison has created in this book.

Review by: S. K. on Sep. 19, 2010 : 5 Stars

i loved this book! i downloaded it to my phone to read when i had time to kill, and some times it would be a month span before i picked it up again but it was so well written that i had no trouble getting right back into it again. i am honestly excited to read another book from this author. and hope that he puts out a second to this one.

Tesla’s Stepdaughters for Kindle Price Cut – Guidebook Coming Soon

Amazon has decided to discount the Kindle edition of Tesla’s Stepdaughters.  If you are a Kindle user (or if you use Kindle for PC, or iPad, or any of the other versions they offer for different devices) you can buy it now for just $2.39

On another note, I am just about done with Tesla’s Stepdaughters: Guide to the World and Music of The Ladybugs.  This is a companion/source book about the characters and setting in the novel, with an emphasis on the Ladybugs songs.  The Ladybugs are the band in the story, if you haven’t guessed already.  This little companion book will be available as an ebook, free, and as soon as it is available, I’ll let you know.

http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?t=citofama-20&o=1&p=8&l=bpl&asins=B0045UA7DQ&fc1=000000&IS2=1&lt1=_blank&m=amazon&lc1=0000FF&bc1=000000&bg1=FFFFFF&f=ifr

The Drache Girl – Chapter 10 Excerpt

Saba Colbshallow rapped his knuckles on the front door of the five story structure, again, louder than he had before, but there was just as little response as there had been the first time.

“Police constable!” he called. He waited a bit longer, and was just about to leave when he heard a distinctly sultry voice from inside.

“Who is it?”

“Police constable,” he said again.

The door opened and Zurfina stood in the doorway, her strange little leather dress displaying a good portion of her breasts with their star tattoos as well as her long legs. Her thigh high boots had such high heels that she could almost look Saba in the eye.

“Yes? What is it?” she said, with the air of someone who had just been interrupted in the middle of something vitally important.

“May I come in?” he asked.

With an exaggerated sigh, the sorceress turned her back and walked into the house, leaving the door wide open. Saba followed her in and looked around the large room that formed the lower level of the structure. It was, he thought, a surprisingly mundane looking combination of kitchen, parlor, and dining room. The place was tidy and organized, none of the furnishings looking particularly worn or new, expensive or poor. Zurfina waved her hand and the door slammed shut behind him, causing him to jump a little.

“Well?”

Saba swallowed. He had known Zurfina for four years now, and found her just as wondrous, mysterious, and fascinating as he had when he was sixteen. He had of course grown up to be a police constable, but she had grown to be a legend. She was an attractive woman: not as beautiful as Mrs. Dechantagne of course, not as charming as Mrs. Dechantagne Calliere was at least capable of being, and nowhere near as adorable as Miss Lusk. Neither did she have the curvaceous figure of Dr. Kelloran. But as writer Geert Resnick wrote in his novel “The Pale Sun”, “the painting that most draws one to it, is not the most beautiful, but the one hanging to the wall by the most tenuous thread.” Zurfina held the same appeal as a fast horse, an unstable bomb, or a canoe in a river filled with crocodiles. And there was power. Power was always appealing.

Zurfina sensed his hesitation and moved to stand very close to him.

“Now, little Saba,” she said, with exaggerated slowness. “What brings you to see Zurfina the Magnificent.”

Saba had perfected his stare, a piercing look that let those he was interviewing know that he would brook no nonsense. He gave the sorceress one of these stares, but it didn’t seem to work as well as it was supposed to. She stepped a little closer and he suddenly realized he could smell her breath. It was minty.

“Little Saba.” Her charcoaled grey eyes seemed to be looking at something just below the surface of his face.

He swallowed.

“Police Constable Colbshallow,” he corrected.

She leaned forward so that the tip of her nose was only an inch from his.

“Little Saba,” she repeated. “There’s something you’ve been dying to tell me.”

“No there isn’t.”

“Then why are you here?”

“I’m here about a Miss Amadea Jindra.”

Zurfina leaned back and scrunched up her nose. “Now what business is that of yours?”

He retrieved the notepad from his coat pocket and flipped it open. Turning so that he had better light to read by, he took the opportunity step away from the sorceress.

“It was reported that you kidnapped, um… acquired Miss Jindra from the deck of the S.S. Arrow four days ago, and no one has seen her since.”

“I say again, what business is it of yours?” Zurfina spoke distinctly, chopping each word as if came out of her mouth. The temperature of the room dropped several degrees.

“You cannot simply snatch people off the street…” His voice trailed off as he noticed the sorceress’s eyes flashing.

Zurfina folded her arms across her chest and raised one eyebrow. At that moment the door swung open and Senta walked in. Her bright pink dress peaked out from beneath a heavy white overcoat, with a fur trimmed hood. She was carrying a large bed pillow under each arm. She kicked the door shut with the heel of her shoe, and walked over to stand next to the sorceress. She looked first at Zurfina and then at Saba.

“Okay,” said Senta. “What’s going on?”

“Little Saba was just telling me what I can and cannot do.”

“Well, this isn’t going to end up well, and you know who will have to clean up the mess? Me, that’s who. Here are your pillows,” Senta shoved the pillows into Zurfina’s hands.

Once the sorceress had taken the pillows, Senta took Saba by the hand and led him toward the front door.

“Let’s talk outside. I love the smell of pine trees and chimney smoke.” She led him outside, closing the front door behind her. “What exactly are you doing?”

“Conducting police business.”

“Stopping me from taking care of those wankers who shot Bessemer has gone to your head, eh?”

“This is my job. This is what I do,” said Saba. I protect the public peace.”

“And do you ever think about how you would do that job if you were turned into, say, I don’t know, a pig?”

“A pig?”

“Maybe a pig. Could be anything really. I thought I was about to see a Police Constable shaped lawn ornament. But then I don’t have Zurfina’s wide experience and peculiar wit.”

“Well I have to go back in and talk to her.”

“Did they have to take your brain out to make that helmet fit?”

Disneyland Tips Courtesy of Jungle is 101

If you like Disneyland as much as I do, you’ll want to follow these tips from “Jungle is 101”, a great blog about life in the Disney Park.  Follow the link for great tips for enjoying your trip.  http://jungleis101.blogspot.com/2010/11/disneyland-quick-tips.html