Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Finally (really!) writing Collider

I started writing Collider yesterday. 

It’s only about thirty years in the making. When I first came up with the Space Corps stories, the Danab didn’t even exist. It’s since become known as the Danab Cycle. I didn’t really have a story, back then, but I stumbled into one when I very unexpectedly decided to kill off one of the main characters early on.  Hey, I’m a Star Trek geek. I’m sure there was some Tasha Yar reasoning involved. 

As the years advanced, I worked on the story until everything about it made sense. I even figured out why that character’s death meant something. I wrote a novella, eventually, dealing specifically with that (Terrestrial Affairs), which kind of lightened the load a little. It remains absolutely essential to this story, but the whole story doesn’t have to explain why it happened so much as what resulted. 

I had the last of the needful breakthroughs, really, only later in the day. So I added to what I wrote yesterday this morning. And can now plunge confidently forward.

I‘ll keep you posted…

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

My Dr. Seuss comic book script is going to be published???

 https://a.co/d/gJwZ6uh

Wow. So. Wow. 

This isn’t scheduled to happen until next January, but this is something I gave up on ever happening. I wrote this thing more than a decade ago, a lifetime ago in a lot of respects. 

It’s the third comic book script I wrote for this publisher (I don’t get paid at all, and clearly, after those first two, even getting exposure certainly never happened, either). The first two garnered a smattering of reviews, some of them about what you’d expect from these things.

Since this thing was written so long ago, it’s not up to date. It doesn’t cover the recent censorship of Dr. Seuss’s career that we somehow let happen. I know there are different ways to phrase that, and if the publisher itself plays along, does it really count? To me, it does. Not because I have an abiding love for the “lost” material. In fact, I read far more Seuss after I wrote this script, and it’s not all the Seuss, not even that “new” Seuss that happened after all this. 

But there’s a rhyming scheme to the thing. I tried. I tried to cover the spirit. It’s been entirely out of my hands for many years.

But it apparently will be a real thing!

Saturday, May 17, 2025

What all those books looked like when I unboxed them…


 I can’t control what happens when they’re released into the world, but gosh do I like looking at ‘em. 

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Oh...only NINE books released the last few months...

Woo!

So I finally went ahead and cleared the backlog, which resulted in a true glut of new material in paperback edition...

A Most Excellent Fancy, whose release was already reported here, started all this.  This was my final Kindle Vella project, and also the first of the many books to be filled (increasingly so) with footnotes.  I finally poked around my Word program enough to figure out how to do this, and walked away from Kindle Direct Publishing's templates so that I could produce the results in book form, too.  I really, really got carried away.  Read more so I can explain...

The Ripped Blade is the most recent release, which theoretical readers of this blog (I think I've lost all of the real ones finally!) just finished reading last month in the annual A to Z Challenge.  Anyone picking up a paperback edition will find it festooned with footnotes, as previously suggested, which was really half the reason I wrote the story in the first place.  Originally I was going to write them in a fictitious fashion, but I realized I had plenty of real world material to round out the volume.  I got so carried away with the footnotes in other books I desperately wanted to keep it going, so by April (I didn't choose to unofficially participate until the first of the month, so everything was literally generated and written during it) I came up with as convenient an excuse as was available.  I'd previously decided writing a mystery from a host of perspectives, most of them investigators of some fashion, was a good idea, so I was able to graft that onto the experiment from the start.  I had good great fun, anyway.

City of Tomorrow is a collection of material that picks up where my very first short story collection, Monorama (which, incidentally, the publication for which ushered this very blog), left off from stories posted to Sigild V (until last month the bulk of where my fiction is posted).  Of course it's chock full of footnotes.  It's also the longest of the books released in this period, and it's got the best cover, probably the best cover I've ever done.

Easter Tales is the culmination of a project inadvertently begun in 2017 but picked up in earnest in 2020, short stories written for various days of the three day Easter story from various points in history and perspectives, each of them explaining what the death and resurrection of Jesus means to them, and us.  I think it's some of the best stuff I've ever written, and it's a rare reflection of my Catholic/Christian faith in my writing (the hardest book I've ever published to actually recommend is Reading Biblically, which is my tour of the Bible, which happens to include commentary on "the real Ten Commandments" that makes sense in context, but would probably be somewhat controversial if anyone ever just stumbled on it).

The Annotated Series of Short Trips is the most shameless release as far as footnotes go; it's right there in the title, a hodgepodge mishmash of brief material that on its own wouldn't have been considered for any of these books, but makes a nice package, at least as far as authors desperately enamored with footnotes go.

The Age of Theory, American Poems, and Life & Theft wrap up the collections of poems posted to various blogs over the years.  I'd never really publicized these here, but it's increasingly significant material, including earlier volumes that are filled with my personal philosophies as well as mounds of angst...

Finally, there's 52 Reasons to Love, which is not about love itself, but rather 52, the DC weekly comic book series that I've long championed and continue to recommend as one of the great superhero experiences yet created.  This is an unofficial guidebook, including summaries of every issue, background information including about the main creators for the uninitiated (they're all big deals for those already in the know), everything that followed, and tacked on because of the title, 52 concise reasons, well, to love 52.

It's very possible I've finally gone insane.  If true, at least I have a few books to show for it.

Wednesday, April 30, 2025

A to Z Challenge 2025 - The Ripped Blade: “Zip It”

Perry Shepherd had been the first of the three private investigators hired by Ford to investigate the Meadows case. The reason was quite simple: Shepherd’s roots in the Berlin police department, in these matters, ran deepest of all. He’d been Harmony Wright’s senior partner. He was retired now. He’d been on the force when the original kidnappings occurred, when Foster was arrested and convicted. His were the sins that started them all.

For these reasons, Shepherd initially appeared as if he wasn’t going to accomplish anything at all. That was why Pawley was hired. Ford believed in Shepherd, but Shepherd himself considered it Ford forcing a sense of redemption Shepherd himself didn’t find necessary. He didn’t feel the need to defend his work. This had the effect of provoking a defensive attitude. He resented Ford, and let him know under no uncertain terms.

The days turned into weeks turned into months. He was being paid regardless. Every week Ford would show up at his door with an envelope. Never asked him a single question. Shepherd interpreted the look he saw in Ford’s face how he wanted. Eventually he stopped looking. Ford showed up every week anyway.

It was an idle moment fiddling on that “smart phone” his niece had bought for him after an incident where his Chevy had broken down and he hadn’t had his phone on him, his cheap, data plan phone that supplemented the landline he still used, the cellphone he never used, wasting time on Facebook, when he came across someone sharing Kate Meadows’ last post.

The post was entirely innocuous. If it hadn’t been her last no one would have noticed or cared. The fact is, as far as he could tell, and Shepherd was certainly no expert, unless you expressed something controversial or incriminating, no one cared what you told about yourself, your place in the world, especially if you weren’t trying to ingratiate yourself to some group identity. And that had been Kate’s one and only sin, the courage to drown without a lifeline. Shepherd went down the rabbit hole. He spent hours sifting through all her posts. Neither Bishop nor Malkovich had ever interacted with her material. She did post videos and photos of her relationship with Bishop, which was as far as Shepherd could tell why the media coverage had obsessed over him. An anonymous rascal, though, whom he suspected but couldn’t prove to be White, had constantly harassed her. She had chosen to disengage as much as possible. It hadn’t seemed to help.

That last post was about her dog. She’d been worried. She never had the chance to bring it to the vet. Shepherd made a note to warn Bradley about that.

That was also when he started sharing his thoughts, first with the dog walker, then Hodgson, then Gene Reid. They all agreed that Matt White was the likeliest suspect. It was Shepherd, though, who convinced Ford that charges should be pressed. The resulting trial couldn’t possibly be the media circus that had already been made out of the case. White was convicted, sentenced, and ended up in the same facility as Priscilla Foster.

That was when Shepherd made his first visit. He brought his new phone with him. He shared with Foster Kate’s Facebook posts. It was Foster who interpreted all the ones Kate had written about her, always worded from oblique angles, that Shepherd had overlooked. Foster quietly asked him to leave, then. Later, he thought he understood why.

Late at night he scrolled through Kate’s timeline. He’d never known her when she was alive. She was too young to register, when Foster’s problems occurred. That’s what he’d told himself, then. The next day, he waited patiently for the Andromeda & Ash to open. Kay Poole had been given the sword, after its release from the evidence locker. He asked to see it. 

When he showed up at the Hawkeye, Ford was still there. They ended up talking about Kate for hours. 

Tuesday, April 29, 2025

A to Z Challenge 2025 - The Ripped Blade: “You Can’t Teach An Old Dog New Tricks”

After Harmony Wright left the force, Gene Reid was assigned as Shirley Stanley’s new partner.

Gene had only recently completed his training, and there were plenty of doubts about him. He seemed to lack confidence, and freely shared his concerns about joining the department in the shadow of the Kate Meadows case. Patrol in a small town like Berlin usually meant planting inside a cruiser and waiting for something to happen, usually minor traffic violations, the common stock of speeding, which society had given up on as a vice, had turned it into a virtue, which meant issuing actual tickets for couldn’t just be done because of what a radar said.

This gave those inside the cruiser plenty of time to think, waiting on nothing. If anything Gene was an overthinker, which was what Shirley had spent a lot of her time complaining about. She’d already had her fill of the Meadows case. Like most people she’d viewed Harmony’s departure as a closing of the book. The town positively crawled with folks trying to prove otherwise, always buzzing the station, just a regular swarm of nuisance, but then, for a town used to being ignored all the attention was an embarrassment on multiple levels, and that was certainly going to cause a backlash.

Gene persisted. As the weeks advanced into months, he settled in. Shirley developed a kind of affection for him, began to grasp his thought process. It didn’t change how she felt about the Meadows case, but she was at least willing to humor him. There was plenty of time to kill, after all.

She listened as he talked about Matt White, at how he’d been overlooked, taken at face value, at how he had blatantly lied to everyone, at how no one had looked deeper into his claims. Shirley felt insulted, but then Gene was hardly the only one who had been talking about Matt White. The dog sitter, the detective missing a leg, Perry Shepherd.

In fiction it’s common to solve crimes to a thoroughly satisfactory degree. In the real world there’s always doubt. The infuriating part is that even when there seems to be absolutely no doubt it’s still difficult to prove. That’s what Shirley kept trying to argue with Gene. But Gene persisted.

Gene went over everything all over again. He talked to Bradley, to Hodgson, to Shepherd, to Rios, to Kay Poole. He even went up to visit Priscilla Foster. Ford, who had hired all the private investigators, one after the other, privately admitted he was ashamed at how all this had played out. He consulted Tara Thompson, the detective, who had also included White in her list of suspects, but who had been dissuaded from pursuing the case, in the end, had discovered why the FBI wasn’t involved, why Ford felt so beleaguered, and it was a matter of innocence.

The wrong kind of innocence. White was distantly connected to the right kind of people. In different times, different ages, different contexts, the right kind of people look very different, but in the final analysis they tend to be untouchable. White himself wasn’t in their number, but the fact of his association had placed him under their graces. Not everything that had happened, here, was a result of their meddling, but enough. Just enough. Tyler Salazar, that elusive infiltrator, had been from their number, a bastard outcast, a failed spoiled wreck of a fortunate son, all those years ago, of the number who in the days of the Nazis would have done everything to downplay what Nazis actually were, but in later days have pretended there was no way to know how awful Nazis were.

If only.

Gene pushed his way through. He found the blood evidence that had been hiding in plain sight, in Matt White’s car, down in Casco Bay, the car White had reported as stolen before Meadows had gone missing, had proven beyond a shadow of a doubt how premeditated the whole bloody affair had been, how White had slipped, had admitted it to the conspiracy theorist Dale Salvage, finally, how Salvage hadn’t thought much at the time, had admitted it to Gene, how Wilmut Snee, when asked again, had admitted to seeing White’s Mitsubishi in twilight hours after the disappearance, corroborated by Emily Bowman, corroborated by Cyril Fernandez, now cooperating on a plea bargain…

All this didn’t elevate Gene’s standing in the department. He didn’t grow in confidence so much as become exasperated, and as a rule it’s really not a good thing to question the system. No one learned anything, learning the truth of what had happened to Kate Meadows, and why it had been so difficult to discover. 

Gene settled into a frustrating life. He’d had practice. In this instance, practice didn’t make perfect.

Monday, April 28, 2025

A to Z Challenge 2025 - The Ripped Blade: “X Marks the Spot”

Harmony Wright poisoned much of the ground in the Kate Meadows case very early on. She was Shirley Stanley’s original partner. She was one of the longest serving cops in Berlin. She should’ve known better. But she’d simply been a bad cop her whole career. 

She ignored most of what was discovered by later investigations. She didn’t have the first clue how the sword had entered the picture, that it had been in the family for generations. She heard that it had been in the pawn shop, and that was enough. That was how it entered the record, and that’s how it stayed.

She sketched out Kate’s relationship with Tommy Bishop and Tom Malkovich. She knew what everyone always assumes, that the simplest, easiest story is usually the right one. Everyone in town already knew, had already been talking about Bishop, about Malkovich, and it was Harmony who entered that into the record, too. Shirley Stanley had no idea how many preconceived notions she was guided along. She trusted Harmony. Why wouldn’t she?

All this was in the earliest days. It was Harmony who led the investigation into the disappearance, who was the point of contact when the nation caught wind of the missing persons case, when Kate’s face was plastered all over the news and people were sympathetic mostly because she was an attractive young woman, and Bishop just came off as sketchy, and Malkovich, creepy. Love triangle. One of the oldest stories in the book, right?

Harmony had been there for the other disappearances. She’d covered the Priscilla Foster case. She was the expert. Everyone trusted her.

When Kate turned up dead and it was officially ruled a tragedy, a murder, no one stopped to wonder why it was Harmony hadn’t been able to prevent it. Except that she hadn’t accounted for the timeline of events, she hadn’t bothered to do much more than sketch what anyone could’ve sketched. 

Except Shirley Stanley. It was Shirley who finally confronted Harmony. They’d had disagreements, here and there, all along, really, and Harmony had put them down to Shirley’s inexperience. Harmony had a temper, and she tended to handle all problems the same way, by getting mad and elevating the situation. But then, she worked in a small town like Berlin. She’d always been able to hide. Shirley had always been told she was the problem. 

When the questions from other investigations started filtering their way into the station, Harmony was asked to step down. It was handled like an early retirement. She was allowed to keep her dignity.

The damage, though, had already been done. Malkovich, particularly, had already been in one holding cell or facility for months, for close to a year, had sat in various courtrooms, had been demonized around the country. Bishop had lost his job, had been ostracized by his family, and was in fact now homeless. These are things that don’t show up in the news. He was now an addict. 

And Harmony Wright sat comfortably at home. She still thought she was right. And not one person affected by her decisions ever bothered her thoughts. She was probably the one person in the country who didn’t even know what Kate Meadows looked like.

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