Tag: books

  • Weekly Writing Challenge

    I’m Looking For My Tribe.

  • Elder Gods and the case for Ancient Aliens.

    Elder Gods and the case for Ancient Aliens.

  • Discover Steel Machines: A Dark Fantasy by Dan Franklin

  • Following in their Footsteps.

    Following in their Footsteps.

    Operation Market Garden 34 Years Later

  • Progress Report 01/30/2025

    Once again I’ve failed at keeping everyone up to date on my progress. In my effort to provide the best story I can for my readers I’ve taken the time to make sure everything is as right as I can possibly make it. What follows are the updates for each of my projects.

    Zomething Dead This Way Comes is back from the editor and I’m going through the manuscript addressing the issues noted. I’m shooting to have everything in place in February. I’ve also received four possible covers from my designer and I’m considering which one to go with. I’ll have more info soon on that.

    Over the past two years I have put down nearly 200,000 words as I’ve completed the first draft for Assimilation, book three of my Shadows of the Past trilogy. The trilogy is currently in rewrites then it will be off to my editor. I’m shooting for a late spring release for this.

    I’ve also completed the first draft of Faces of Our Fathers, book five of This Lawless Land, and have about another 30,000 words to go in Lair of the Broken Queen, which may, or may not be the final book in the series. I’ve been considering a seventh book I will title To Tame This Lawless Land, but I want to see how Lair of the Broken Queen shakes out first. I’m shooting for near the end of the year to have books five and six released. We’ll see then about book seven.

    I’ve also begun work on The Bad Place (not the final title, just a placeholder,) and I’m closing in on 30,000 words for that. I’ve been thinking along the lines of Nightwalker in some form or another as the title for this. This will likely be a 2026 title, released in mid winter/early spring.

    I’ve really been buckling down on my daily word counts. Shooting for an average of at least 1000 words a day. Some days I’ve hit more when the story really grips me, but I no longer allow myself to settle for only 500 words a day.

    I’m hopeful that by late summer I can bring back my weekly writing challenge with a minimum of 500 words every Wednesday until the story is done, then moving on to the next story.

    There’s a good bit going on behind the scenes right now. We lost our boy Max last year, we had a good fourteen years with him and that really hurt. A couple of knuckleheads moved in with us late in 2023. Mylo and Garfield are brothers from the same litter, and they get into everything. But we love them.

    Brothers Mylo & Garfield
    Garfield with big brother Max

    Until next time. Here’s the opening I’m considering for The Bad Place. What do you think? I know it needs a little tweaking.

    They lied to us, our parents, when they said there was nothing to be afraid of in the dark. They had outgrown their fear, replacing it with the reasoning of an adult who excused the cause for every bump and creak throughout the night. Attributing those errant sounds to the house settling or a rodent seeking shelter for the coming winter. It was in the dark where our greatest fears live. Hiding the monster under the bed, the creature in the closet, or the ghost at the window.

    When you’re eleven you don’t worry about making the house payment, or if Mr. Whetstone, your boss, is going to lay you off. You don’t worry about whether your wife still loves you, or if she’s banging the bag boy at the local Sav-A-Lot behind your back.

    When you’re eleven your fear lives much closer to your heart, in your nightmares, and the shadows crowding the corners of a darkened bedroom where the weak light of the nightlight dare not go. When you’re eleven the world is filled with equal measures of wonder and terror.

    Doug’s greatest fear at eleven was the walking dude. A character from one of the books his older brother once read, a being of unimaginable evil that came to their sleepy little town one night after a heavy storm. Doug had witnessed the walking dude’s arrival. The measured, steady, clip clop of his footsteps on the street in front of the house pulled him from a deep sleep. Slipping out of bed he shook his brother to wake him and crossed to the window so he could see who was walking down the street. Outside, the world was cloaked in darkness, low clouds obscuring the face of the moon that might have offered a degree of solace to a child coming face to face with his greatest fear.