Fatal Winds book launch and signing

Join me at my book launch and signing at Artifacts Gallery in Farmington, 302 E. Main from 9:30 a.m. until noon on September 28, 2019. Thirteen years of painstaking research have gone into the writing of Fatal Winds, a passion that has consumed me.

This story was inspired by learning that my young cousin Jimmy was a Downwinder dying of cancer because of radioactive fallout from atomic bomb testing in the Nevada desert in the 1950s and 60s. This is compelling tale of warning and hope. It is a story everyone must learn about and take heed. Today, more than ever nuclear pollution is a global threat.

Women Writing the West Conference

Five writers from Farmington attended the Women Writing the West 2016 conference in Santa Fe. It was really a great event with plenty of agents/editors and lots of feedback during the pre-conference Writers’ Roundtable I attended. That was such a good conference, several of us are traveling to Tucson in October to attend the 2017 Women Writing the West conference.

Writer’s Meet and Greet

On June 9th during the first summer Art Walk the Farmington Writers Circle held a Meet and Greet. Eight writers signed their books at the event hosted by Artifacts Gallery. Twelve participants gave readings at an open mic emceed by local public radio celebrity, Scott Michlin. The evening began with a violin concert presented by Tennille Taylor’s students. The San Juan Photographers exhibited their photographs which viewers browsed while listening to the readings and tasting salsa. The Writers Circle thanks Bev Taylor, her family and staff for a stellar evening.

Atomic Bomb Explosion

This is a photograph of an atomic bomb explosion. I’m posting this to make people aware of the dangers of nuclear testing and warfare. Having my baby sister under a cancer threat brought up the old grief of losing two of my young cousins that are her age because they were Downwinders, victims of radioactive fallout during the era of atomic bomb testing in the Nevada desert. Cows ate the grass that had radioactive ash on it. Their milk concentrated the radioactivity. Unsuspecting mothers gave the milk to their children. My book Fatal Winds follows a young genius who helps build the bomb and later becomes an activist against bomb testing because he sees the plight of the Downwinders – children being the most vulnerable.

Pele’s Realm

A crime adventure set on the Big Island of Hawaii!

A crime that bears the signature of a murder with a message puts newlyweds Maggie and John Kovak in jeopardy. They become targets for violence when the Hawaiian Mafia learns that Maggie was a close friend to the victim and may know too much. Pele’s Realm is a story that resonates with the heartbeat of the Big Island of Hawaii as John and Maggie discover each other and explore the realm of Madam Pele, the Fire Goddess of the volcano.

Evading Mafia thugs, John and Maggie take you along as they tramp over lava flows, peer down into a live volcano and make love under a secluded waterfall. Based on an actual murder that took place in the early 1970s during a time when Mauna Ulu erupted continually for five years, this book will keep you turning pages. Become immersed in the magic of Hawaii in a story of adventure and romance that gives a peek into the sinister side of Paradise.

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Fatal Winds

Fatal Winds tells the stories of people who were downwind of radioactive fallout during the atomic bomb tests conducted in the Nevada desert during the 50s and 60s.

Troubled by the death of my young cousin Jimmy,  I was inspired me to research and write about the bomb. Following is an overview of the story:

Called into wartime service at Los Alamos, young physicist Reese Mayfield applies his genius to developing the first atomic bomb. At 5:29.21 a.m. on July 16, 1945. “The Gadget,” as it is code-named, explodes and changes the world and Reese forever.

Although the bomb ends the WWII bloodshed, Reese questions its other effects when his first love dies of cancer from proximity to the first atomic test. After the war, Reese pursues a medical degree to study the effects of radioactive fallout. What he learns deeply disturbs him: In southern Utah, downwind of the Nevada test site, ranchers are losing livestock to deformity and mutation, and children and adults are dying of cancer. Mothers are having their children’s teeth tested for lethal radioactive exposure. Pigs are being used to test blast-proof clothing.  Reese is driven to protest the continued testing, but the government regards the residents as collateral damage, and testing continues. The Cold War has shifted the nation’s priorities—America must lead the world in nuclear weapons. Downwinders are the sacrificial victims.

“Fatal Winds” is an 80,000 word historical novel about these victims. During this era, few comprehended the long-term effects the bomb would have on its developers and the residents living near the test sites. Reese Mayfield’s story represents the heart of these experiences. It is based on fact.

Fatal Winds is now available in ebook and print on Amazon.

Roberta Summers biography

Roberta Summers is an award winning author with a Creative Writing degree from San Juan College.  A current resident of Farmington, New Mexico, Summers lived in Hawaii for twenty-five years and on the slopes of Mauna Loa volcano in Hilo on the Big Island for five of those years. During that time a friend of hers was murdered by the Hawaiian Mafia. Her novel Pele’s Realm is titled after the Fire Goddess of the Volcanoes, Madam Pele, and is based upon that crime. She is also published in poetry and short stories and has served as an editor for the San Juan College Arts and Literary Magazine, Perspectives. She is a former co owner the publishing house, Silverjack Publishing which was housed at San Juan College’s Enterprise Center.

Summers is a member of Women Writing the West and Pikes Peak Writers in Colorado Springs where she served as a 2010, 2014 and 2015 contest judge. She is a former president of Trois Rivieras Fiction Writers. Currently active in the San Juan Writers Critique group, she has participated in book signings around the Southwest and authors’ panels at public libraries. She has appeared in numerous news articles and on public radio where she has been featured on the show “Write on Four Corners.”

Summers is currently working simultaneously on three novels—a  western with a female protagonist, Maryann Winslow; a romance set in Hawaii, Hanalei; and her passion, a completed manuscript about the plight of the Utah Downwinders, victims of radioactive fallout from nuclear testing in the Nevada desert during the 50s and 60s, Fatal Winds. Summers was raised in Southern Utah during the atomic bomb testing. She has seen young family die from fallout caused cancers. These deaths inspired her research and writing of Fatal Winds.

About her writing, she says, “I write because I have something to say, and I want to be heard—it’s a burning desire.”

Summers is a contest winner for Fatal Winds in the genre of historical fiction in the 2014 Pikes Peak Writers Contest. She served three years as a contest judge for their prestigious Zebulon contest.

Visit her website robertasummers.com.