đŸ“–Authors To Watch: Randy C. Dockens Author of Erabon Prophecy Trilogy #authorstowatch #interview



 


Dr. Randy C. Dockens has a fascination with science and with the Bible, holds Ph.D. degrees in both areas, and is a man not only of faith and science, but also of creativity. He believes that faith and science go hand in hand without being enemies of each other.

After completing his bachelor’s degree in pharmacy from Auburn University he went on to graduate school at Auburn and completed his first doctorate degree in Pharmaceutics. He began his scientific career as a pharmacokinetic reviewer for the Food and Drug Administration and later joined a leading pharmaceutical company as a pharmacokineticist, which is a scientist who analyzes how the human body affects drugs after they have been administered (i.e, absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and excreted).

Through the years, he has worked on potential medicines within several disease areas, including cardiovascular, fibrosis, and immunoscience to seek and develop new and novel medicines in these therapy areas.

He has also had his attention on the academic study of the Bible. He earned a second doctorate in Biblical Prophecy from Louisiana Baptist University after receiving a master’s degree in Jewish Studies from the Internet Bible Institute under the tutelage of Dr. Robert Congdon.

Randy has recently retired from his pharmaceutical career and is spending even more time on his writing efforts. He has written several books that span dystopian, end-time prophecy, science fiction, and uniquely told Bible stories. All of his books, while fun to read, are futuristic, filled with science to give them an authentic feel, have a science fiction feel to them, and allow one to learn some aspect of Biblical truth one may not have thought about before. This is all done in a fast-paced action format that is both entertaining and provides a fun read to his readers.

Randy’s latest books are in the Christian science fiction series, ERABON PROPHECY TRILOGY.

You can visit his website at www.RandyDockens.com or connect with him on TwitterFacebook and Goodreads.


We welcome you to My Bookish Pleasures! Can you tell us how you got started writing fiction?

I guess it’s a good thing you said answers can be as long as needed because it’s a rather convoluted story. I think I’ve always had the desire to write a book and be published. Yet, there was never any real follow-through as it seemed like such a dauting task. Plus, I never felt I had the time for such an endeavor as I was so focused on my career: first pharmacy school, then graduate school, and then working with the Food and Drug Administration and then transitioning into pharmaceutical industry. Yet, several years later, I decided to go back to school for biblical studies. I at first just wanted to learn to better understand the Bible, but then when I was asked if I wanted to audit or take the courses for credit, I decided that if I was going to do the work, I might as well get the credit. Again, no real plans there, just a desire to learn. Yet, one thing led to another, and I found myself with another doctorate. This time in biblical prophecy. I found the subject so fascinating. That’s when I had to decide what was I going to now do with all that new-found knowledge.

Once, for my pharmaceutical job, I had to take a round-the-world tour stopping in India and Japan for several meetings. So, while in flight, the idea of writing a book came back to me and I began to write out what later became a nonfiction book about how the entire world is tied to a Jewish timeline, the topic which stemmed from my dissertation about Gentiles in the Bible. Yet, I never got any real traction from agents on that concept, so I began to think about taking my biblical learning and putting that into fictional stories. I took my understanding of science and of end-time prophecy and wrote a story about a character living in the coming Messiah’s promised kingdom and what his life could possibly look like in that environment. Most people I asked about their understanding of this time in future history as discussed in the Bible stated they really didn’t understand what the Bible taught about such a kingdom, so I thought readers could learn something and be entertained at the same time.

When I talked to a publisher at a writer’s conference about my idea, he stated that while my idea was possibly a good story, that may not be the best idea for a debut novel. So, I had to think more about a story more general and relatable. Driving home from work one day, my mind thought about the current world view and how God seemed to be less and less in our culture. I then thought about what would happen if the knowledge of God was completely taken away or banned. What would that look like? That’s when I started on The Coded Message Trilogy. This story is about an astrophysicist who works on a Mars mission and finds certain discrepancies at his work that then leads him down a road discovering how the masses are being controlled by mind manipulation. He then begins to search for the truth certain elites are trying to hide from everyone. It became a dystopian mystery trilogy and the first series that became published: T-H-B, F-S-H-S, and T-U-L-E. The book titles are the clues the characters in the books must solve to understand the truth for which they are seeking. The books allow readers to go on the same discovery mission along with the characters.

Describe your writing process. Do you plot or write by the seat of your pants? When and where do you write?

I have to say I’m a pantser. I have tried plotting everything out beforehand but found that, for me, such a process seems to inhibit my creativity. I have a concept in mind and a general idea of where I want to start and where I want to end, but no idea how to get there. I just start, put myself in the moment and see what develops. I know that would likely drive some authors bonkers, but that’s sort of how I roll. It makes it exciting for me because I feel like I’m on a constant adventure and discovering where the story goes each time I sit down to write. I think it makes the whole process more exciting.

Many times, I will go out to a restaurant franchise (like Saladworks or Dairy Queen) and get something to eat and then write, edit, or proofread. For some reason being at different venues helps me more than sitting at home and writing from the same place all the time. Most of the time I am at home at the dining table or in my comfy chair, but I do find the change in venues helpful to keep ideas flowing in my mind.

Can you tell us about your most recent release?

The series that just completed is called Erabon Prophecy Trilogy. In this series, the main character, Nuke, finds himself on worlds totally different from anything he has ever experienced, yet he finds certain things so familiar to him. This makes him question the reality of what he is experiencing. Also, when back with his friends in his solar system he always felt different because his skin has an electrical conductance which causes the medical equipment to go haywire during his physical exam when he first enters the Academy for training in the International Exploration Federation. His best friend, Michael, laughs it off and calls him “nuclear” which leads to his nickname Nuke which all his friends begin to call him. Although he brushes it off, this always made him a little self-conscious and feel different from others. Yet, he finds this human uniqueness to be a benefit on these alien worlds as it allows him to fulfill certain alien prophecies.

Nuke finds that he is supposed to help unite six different alien clans, each on a different planet, to help prepare them for the return of Erabon, their deity. Yet, he finds each clan to be bias in the way they worship as they feel their way superior to the way the other clans worship. This fact and the imposed moratorium on space travel become big obstacles to overcome to achieve his prophetic objective. It seems a miracle is expected each step along the way to allow these clans to listen to him and accept him as the prophesied prophet to lead them back to Erabon. Each book portrays his work on two of their worlds: Myeem tells of his work on Myeem, the water planet, and Eremia, the desert planet. Sharab tells of his work on Sharab, the fire planet, and Ramah, the mountainous planet. Qerach tells of his work on Qerach, the ice planet, and Aphia, the air planet.

How did you get the idea for the book?

Interestingly, the genesis of the idea for Erabon Prophecy Trilogy happened over a dinner conversation. My wife and I met with some friends of ours one evening at a local restaurant. The conversation went far and wide and even verged on the ridiculous. We started talking about aliens, and our conversation at first posed the general types of questions most think about: What would aliens think of us humans? How different would they look from us? How advanced would their technology be from ours? Those thoughts then led to deeper questions. What would be their core beliefs? Would they serve a different type of God than we do? As we talked, we came to the realization that if truth is truth, then our God would also be their God. The way they look, the customs they follow, and the way they worship may be different, but the essence of who God really is to them should be the same as he is to us, if God is really God of the universe. These questions got my brain into thinking more about them, and the story was born.

Of all your characters, which one is your favorite? Why?

Well, it’s hard to pick a favorite, but Nuke is one of my favorites. I think many can identify with him. Being in stressful environments makes him vulnerable. I think most people can identify with that. He wants to do the right thing, but often doesn’t. He wants to say the right thing, but often doesn’t. He must learn to cope and adapt on the fly—something he learns to do better over time. Yet it is never easy. He is in an alien world where he must come to terms with the fact that it is he who is the alien.

What was the most challenging aspect of writing your book?

It took quite some time to come up with the different aliens to make them different but believable. For example, each clan of alien has a different color of blood, so I looked at other creatures on earth which have different colors of blood, and why, to use as a basis for something that is different but based on reality. I wanted the story to be very much in the realm of true science fiction but make the science realistic based upon what we know or what things could possibly work so they can appear realistic and not just fantasy. For example, Myeem is a planet composed entirely of water. Is that possible? I did a lot of reading to see if it was. It seems it is possible if the planet is not too large. Therefore, the reason I compared it to the size of our moon. It would need to be somewhere between the size of our moon and the size of earth for such a thing to be possible. The core pressure would need to not be too great that it would cause atoms to fuse together to form other elements.

What projects are you currently working on?

I have already started a new series, The Adversary Chronicles. The books of this series are uniquely told Bible stories. While the stories themselves may be familiar to many readers, I don’t think anyone will have ever heard the stories told as I have told them. One will read how the spiritual and physical worlds are tied together to achieve our historical outcomes as they are told from an angelic perspective. The archangel Mikael and his compatriots are battling their enemy Lucifer, the Adversary. A lot of poetic license is utilized in my stories, but I don’t think such an endeavor takes anything away from what is portrayed in the Bible, but actually enhances that, makes it even more profound, and helps one to understand something about God they may not have considered.

The first book of this series, Rebellion in the Stones of Fire, was published in February of this year. This first book is about the fall of Lucifer and the worldwide flood. I want readers to better understand and appreciate biblical scripture and perhaps gain a perspective about God they may have not considered before. For example, in this first book, it demonstrates the flood was more about God’s love than it was about God’s vengeance.

The next book, The Holy Grail of Babylon, tells the story of the tower of Babel found in Genesis of the Bible, but puts it into a very science fiction scenario. The novel should come out in early July of this year. The next book, The Defining Curse, is under proofreading by my editor. It tells of a curse on a Jewish king proclaimed by the prophet Jeremiah and how Daniel uses his influence in Babylon to change the fate of this king and the whole nation of Israel. Then, I’m in the process of finishing up The Luciferian Plague which is about a nefarious group trying to depopulate the earth using nanotechnology to alter one’s genetic makeup.

What advice would you offer to new or aspiring fiction authors?

The best advice I can tell someone is to not give up. Even successful authors had a starting point, and their start oftentimes was not pretty. So, don't get discouraged. Learn from every feedback no matter how positive or negative it is. Don’t focus on the tone of the feedback but the content of the feedback.

Learn and study the craft of writing. Good grammar and correct spelling are really very important. Granted, one does not have to use correct grammar all the time in one’s writing because as an author you are writing to convey not only information but feelings. Yet, everything you write and the way you write it needs to be deliberate. In other words, you may not follow good grammar, but you need to know you did not follow good grammar and it was intentional. Every sentence, every word, and every punctuation should be purposeful.





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An exciting trilogy where an astronaut, nicknamed Nuke and working on an interstellar gate, is accidentally thrown so deep into the universe there is no way for him to get home. He does, however, find life on a nearby planet, one in which the citizens look very different from him.

Although tense at first, he finds these aliens think he is the forerunner to the return of their deity and has been charged with reuniting the clans living on six different planets. What is stranger to him still is that while everything seems so foreign from anything he has ever experienced, there is an element that also feels extremely familiar.

He has to gain the trust from each alien clan and demonstrate through various acts that he is the one they have been waiting for so each culture can fully accept him and follow him. But for the aliens to accept him as the prophet to their deity, Erabon, he has to first accept it and believe it himself.

Book Information

Release Dates: Book One: Myeem: 23-Dec-2020

Book Two: Sharab: 06-Apr-2021

Book Three: Qerach: 01-Oct-2021

Publisher: Carpenter’s Son Publishing

Number of pagesMyeem/271; Sharab/249; Qerach/347

Link to books on Amazon:

Book One: Myeem: Amazon.com: Myeem: Book One of the Erabon Prophecy Trilogy (Erabon Prophecy Trilogy, 1): 9781952025129: Randy C Dockens: Books

Book Two: Sharab: Sharab: Book Two of the Erabon Prophecy Trilogy (Erabon Prophecy Trilogy, 2): Dockens, Randy C: 9781952025136: Amazon.com: Books

Book Three: Qerach: Qerach: Book Three of the Erabon Prophecy Trilogy (Erabon Prophecy Trilogy, 3): Dockens, Randy C: 9781952025143: Amazon.com: Books

 


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