Sunday, December 13, 2015

Paperback collected edition available!

Hey Star Travelers!  Long time no write.

Sorry about the long absence.  Busy time of year.

Anyhow, all of the "Star Travels" stories thus far are collected now into a paperback edition!  It's a very nice-looking large paperback, with 522 pages comprising over 150,000 words.

If you can't see forking over the dough for the hardcopy, I have made a Kindle edition also available - which is a vast savings over buying all of the novellas individually.

However you want to read it, get your copy today!





If enough of you show interest in this book, there may yet be more adventures for Dr. Jeremiah to come in the future!

Saturday, November 14, 2015

Final book in the series released!

At last, it is upon us!  (And only two weeks late...)

Book 6 of "The Star Travels of Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe" is called "The Free World" and it is now available!

In this, the last of Volume One of the "Star Travels" (I fully intend to come back to the series some day) Jeremiah comes to the planet Mantrika voluntarily, to help aid its citizens in freeing their world from the tyrannical occupation of the Veyans.

Jeremiah has no idea how he could be of use, but he followed the lovely Princess Iltiria here and would do whatever she bid.  But now that he's here, what can he do to help?

In the final stage of Jeremiah's transformation into a hero, he must use everything he has learned thus far in his star travels - and maybe pick up a few extra tricks as well, if he wants to survive this mission.




Enjoy it!  And who knows?  Maybe one day Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe will return...

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

My new horror novella

Sorry for the lack of updates recently.  I'm going to try to do better about posting more frequently.

I am, indeed, still hard at work writing the last book in Volume One of "The Star Travels of Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe".  It's taking a bit longer than expected - and will be a slightly longer work than previous installments - but I hope you find it to be worth the wait in the end.

For now, why not check out my latest book?

It's a horror novella, about a family dealing with the loss of a loved one, who are forced onto the run by a monster that keeps reappearing beneath the boy's bed.

The monster is out for blood.  And it won't stop coming, not until it has satisfied its hunger.






It's creepy, but not gory or disturbing.  It's good little character piece about a broken family trying to piece itself back together.

I hope you enjoy it while waiting for the next "Dr. Jeremiah" story to be released!

Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Free promo!

Good news!

Between Wednesday October 7th and Sunday October 11th, you can get the novelette "Introduction to Danger" absolutely free!





It's a fun and simple story designed to be a great way into the universe that Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe inhabits.

Check it out today!

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Relaunch: all of the new covers

Howdy, folks.

Here it is: the new line-up of covers for "The Star Travels of Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe".


Pick them all up now, and let your friends know!

Only $1.99 each from Amazon US

Or £1.49 from the UK Amazon store

Saturday, October 3, 2015

New covers on the way!

While I begin writing the last installment of Volume One of "The Star Travels of Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe" I am also starting a "relaunch" of the brand.

New covers, with a new title/logo to better catch the eye.  For now, I will show you the new "Book 1" cover, with the rest soon to follow:



Enjoy!

Monday, September 28, 2015

Book 5 finally released!

It's the moment you've all been waiting for!

Book 5 is called "Capitol Punishment" and in it, Jeremiah finds himself on an entire planet that is the capital of its star system.  On the run from several enemies with differing agendas, he must team up with new and old friends to save his life and theirs.

It's a lot of fun, and I hope you enjoy it!






Saturday, September 19, 2015

Finishing Book 5, Beginning Book 6

Hey all.

Book 5 - "Capitol Punishment" - should be out in a week or so.  By this point, I ought to be close to getting the first draft of Book 6 done.  Or at least well on my way.

So why can't I start?

It's the last in Volume One - the final installment in the first phase of Dr. Jeremiah's star travels.  There will be a pause while I write other things, projects I've wanted to work on for some time now.  So I want to get this right,

There are things the book needs to accomplish.  The ending is fine (I've know what it is for a very long time now) but making it count is harder.  Earning it, letting it develop naturally and satisfactorily.  That is what the key is going to be.

I could start writing now.  Easy.  All the details aren't worked out yet, but I could make it up as I go along - I've done it before.  So why not do that?

Because I know it won't work.  Won't work well enough, at any rate, to be satisfying as a semi-conclusion to the series.  I need to make sure this one hits all the right notes, and in the right order.  There's a hundred ways this could mostly turn out okay, and only a few that will be really good.

It's one of those latter that I'm aiming for.  And so I keep hunting.  Keep searching, keep outlining.  And soon (with any luck) I'll hit on the right approach and start writing.

Any day now...

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Keeping busy

I'm almost ready to start on Book 6 of "The Star Travels of Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe".

Right now, while I'm getting it outlined (and figuring out who some of the guest character are) I'm trying to keep the writing muscles exercised not only by redrafting Book 5, but by writing some short stories.

I've got a lot of ideas, and some of them might even be good!  If I decide to publish them, keep an eye out.  It could be something readers of this series will enjoy.

But either way, it won't be long until I can begin the first draft of the final installment of Volume One of Dr. Jeremiah's adventures.

I can't wait!

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Four words

The old adage is that a writer should write at least four pages a day.

Not an average of four pages a day.  At least four pages a day.

Why?  It's all about building discipline.  About making writing a habit.  Forcing yourself to sit on your butt and actually write - not just doing it whenever the moon is right, and the auguries are good.

And yet, it's nonsense.

I don't mean it's bad advice.  Not really.  But it doesn't work for me.

Why not?  Besides the vagueness of the amount (four of what kind of pages?  At what font size?  Double spaced?) I frankly don't think it's any kind of great investment of my time to pound out four pages of absolute crap that I will just delete the next day to rewrite,  There are better things I could be doing with my time.

Like outlining.  I'm not a seat-of-the-pants kinda guy.  I (generally) outline a story to absolute death before I even put pen to (virtual) paper.  (Seriously, in the past I've hunted through sheaves of notes finding where I had which scraps of dialogue scribbled down, as the entire section of banter was pre-written over months of development, and over many separate pieces of scrap paper.)

So here's my compromise:  four words per day.

Yeah, I know.  But for me, just opening Microsoft Word and getting something down is discipline enough, for now.  Even if the last thing I want to do is write, I'm trying to force myself to at least open the program and bash out my four words.

Cause you know what?  Sometimes four words lead to forty.  And sometimes those forty lead to four hundred.  And once in a while, when everything aligns, those four hundred lead to four thousand.

And it never would have happened if I hadn't written those four short words - whatever they are.

If I don't have my next novella (or, soon, novel) ready to begin, then I will start (or continue) a short story.  As long as I am writing something.

At least four words of something.

Friday, September 4, 2015

Preparing for the end

Now that I have finished the first draft of Book 5 ("Capitol Punishment") with still a lot of work left to get it into shape, it is time to prepare for Book 6 (which currently is a very bare bones outline - a fact which frightens me a little).

In doing so, I am forced to confront the fact that Book 6 will definitely be the last book of what I am calling "Volume One".

The character's story arc will effectively resolve by the end of that novella, and it feels like the perfect place to rest the series for a while.

Book Seven begins a new story arc that I am actually quite excited about, so Jeremiah will definitely return for a Volume Two, but there is most certainly a need to pause after Book 6 is released.  (This will also allow me to focus on some other projects which I have been developing.)

I think once you, the readers, get to the end of Book 6 (which, of course, will not be released for almost another two months) you will see why it is a great place to press the 'pause' button.

There is still a lot of excitement to go before then, however, and I hope you will be looking forward to the adventures in Books Five and Six which still lay ahead of us.

Sunday, August 30, 2015

Book 4 released!

I'm aware that I haven't been updating this blog.  I have been busy, and been exhausted, and just let it slip.  I shall endeavor to do better in the future.

For now, though, I am posting this to let you know that Book 4 - "Kingdoms of Sky and Sea" - is available to purchase!





Hope you all enjoy, and I'd better get back to writing Book 5, as there are only four weeks to go until it's out...

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Independent Authors Cooperative Press

Hey guys.

If you've noticed a couple of new logos on the blog, it's because I have joined a new group called the Independent Authors Cooperative Press.

Basically, it's a group of indie authors like myself, who are banding together to support one another - both in a creative sense and a marketing one.  It should, in theory, allow us to increase our visibility, as well as improve our skills in writing.

I'm very happy to be in on the ground floor of this venture, and hope that everyone involved in it commits totally to the concept, as it could really be a great thing for everyone.

Of course, the actual writing still needs to be done alone - which reminds me:  better get back to it.

Saturday, August 1, 2015

Keeping things fresh

I'm not sure I have ever talked about this aspect of "The Star Travels of Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe", so as I work on redrafting Book 4 this seems as good a time as any to talk about it.

Basically, although the series is firmly a Victorian pulp SF tale, I am attempting to vary the story style somewhat from book to book.  They remain in the same tone, always first-person narrated by Jeremiah, but the type of story being told should be somewhat unique every time.  To make every book a little bit special.

Book 1, "Enter the Unknown", is lower in incident - being mostly about the introduction of this Victorian man to the wider universe - with a kind of H.G. Wells slant.  A protagonist who is not completely fazed by his placement in such a bizarre environment, and whose focus is on the details of this new universe he has become witness to.

Book 2, "The Savage Planet", has a little more of an Edgar Rice Burroughs bent.  It's not just the arena fight, but the kind of world into which Jeremiah is flung, and the way he is marked out as special among its peoples.  There's not much of a John Carter vibe, but it's in there, and affects the focus of the storytelling.

Book 3, "Beyond the Frontier" is essentially a steampunk Star Trek.  As in Victorian science fiction, I focus on the little details of the technology and its otherworldliness in a nonsensical but hopefully era-appropriate way, but the function of the space vessel and the type of dangers it faces, are very much drawn from Star Trek.  I always felt that the show (and I am referring to the original, here) was very pulpy to begin with.  Very much my kind of series.

Book 4, "Kingdoms of Sky and Sea" will be slightly more Flash Gordon-y.  I endeavored to construct the plot in a way that utilizes cliffhangers every twenty minutes or so, to keep the pace going, and to give that cinema serial feel to the book.  It has more incident and more action than usual, but also makes sure to contain a lot of intriguing details about the alien culture and technology in it.

Right now, the plan for Book 5 is for it to be even faster paced - with a touch of Star Wars influence - weaving three plot strands together in a way that keeps the action moving ever-forward.  I should begin work on this story next week.


Throughout all of this, despite the attempts to give a different feel and focus to the story of the month, I am trying to have same basic approach to the character and the tone.  A very H.G. Wells/George Griffith way of exploring the environment at least as much as the events.  And above all of that, developing Jeremiah slowly from a self-centered and aristocratic coward into something that retains his basic sense of self but which has a new purpose and recognition of inner worth.

I hope it all comes across.  And I hope it keeps the series fresh and exciting, but consistent.  It's up to you all to let me know how that succeeds!

Sunday, July 26, 2015

Book 3 now available: "Beyond the Frontier"

Hey, Star Travelers!

The wait is over:  Book 3 is now released!

In this installment, Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe is serving aboard a space freighter trying to make his way home - but nothing ever runs smoothly in his world!

The ship faces dangers both within and without, and Jeremiah must rely on his wits and his friends to make it out of this calamity alive.




Saturday, July 11, 2015

State of Affairs

Hope everyone got their copy of the promotional novelette ("Introduction to Danger") while it was free!  (If not, in another 85 days I'll be able to make it free for a further 5 days.)

Book 3 ("Beyond the Frontier") will be out in less than two weeks now.  It needs a little more touch-up work, but it's in great shape!  I also need to start work on the cover...

I've also completed the first draft of Book 4 (title undecided).  This one will need a lot more work to whip it into shape!  But I think it'll be a good one once it's all done.

Among the other work I'm doing (developing that YA series I posted about the other day) I need to figure out the plot for Book 5.  I know the main characters, but none of the events as of yet.  Similarly, Book 6 will need to be plotted out.  I know the ending, and the probable setting, but little else.

It's extremely likely that (unless the series really picks up in popularity) Dr. Jeremiah will take a pause in his star travels after Book 6.  I know what happens in Book 7 that kicks off a new and exciting story arc, though - so don't fear!  He's not going anywhere!  He just probably needs a bit of a rest from his monthly schedule of fast-paced adventures before resuming the fight once more.

So that's where everything stands for right now.  Don't miss "Beyond the Frontier" when it makes its debut a couple of weeks from today!

Thursday, July 9, 2015

And now for something completely different...

No, I haven't given up on Dr. Jeremiah.  He's still out there in space, trying to make his way back to Earth.  And I'm still writing, still publishing one every month.

(Book 3 will be out in two and a half weeks, and I'm close to finishing the first draft of Book 4.)

At the same time, though, I'm trying to develop a YA series probably called "The Dreamtravel Chronicles" and I want to waste your time by sharing the frustrations I'm having with figuring out the first book.

I won't go into details about the setup of the series.  Basically, a group of six teenagers find that at night when they sleep they are together in another place and they wind up having to fight various monsters/villains.

Here's my issue, at the moment.

I want the first novel to have a story that focuses more on the mystery of everything than on the specific enemy. I.e. what is happening, why are we here, how are we here, what does it mean, who is responsible, etc.

This means that the enemy (who will still have to take up the reins of actually driving the plot, despite not being the primary focus) needs to be something instantly understandable to both the audience and the characters. Something that we get right away, and know what they can do and what needs to be done to stop them. (The plot will require more thinking on the part of the heroes to put a stop to them as a group, but individually we want to instantly comprehend the nature of the physical threat.)

So, we are left with the classics. To wit, your vampires, your werewolves, your zombies. Stuff like that. But then where is the originality? (Besides in the premise of the series.) Where is the hook?

Vampires are easy, and lend themselves to any number of plots. A good choice, but overplayed in fiction. And a group of teens battling vampires rather brings to mind a certain TV series that enjoyed a fair popularity.

Werewolves? Trickier due to their traditional lack of subtlety and complexity as a foe. But doable. (Have to say I'm not in love with the idea of right away arming my kids with guns - for the silver bullets.)

How about zombies, then? Also overplayed at the moment, but always popular. And the "who created them?" conspiracy element is an easy one to make work. I can't help but feel that, as influenced as I am by Gena Showalter's "White Rabbit Chronicles", that if I use zombies I'll just end up skewing too close to her plots.

What else is there? Ghosts are recognizable, but the method of their defeat is not immediately intuitive. Aliens are too broad a spectrum for the same reason.

Something less classic, but still understandable? The revival of "Doctor Who" wisely used a classic foe called the Autons because their premise was so instantly relatable: shop window dummies come to life and become murderous. Good shout.

So is that the route I should go? You know: tree creatures - we get it, and we know that fire will destroy them. Fire creatures - makes sense, and we know that water will destroy them.

The structure of the novel is going to be built around the shape of the story that's determined by the nature of the enemy - and I need to figure that out before I can go any further in developing the book.

Anyway, that's where I'm at.  Just needed to get that down on "paper".

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Some more pictures

Just for fun, a handful of images I threw together in my downtime today.





Writing in a Victorian SF style

One of the chief difficulties for me in writing "The Star Travels of Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe" is not the deadlines (a 20,000 word novella every month), coming up with ideas and so forth.  No.  The problem is the juggling act of tone.

You see, I want it to feel like a genuine Victorian/Edwardian sci-fi story.  And yet, I also want that thrilling edge of later pulp works like Flash Gordon (the strip or the serials).  And also, I want it to actually be enjoyable to a modern audience who may not be familiar with the classics, might not (yet) understand the conventions.  (They can learn that as we go, but if they are going to stay for the ride it has to appeal to them off the bat.)

The conventions of early pulp SF are varied, but for my purposes there is one thing that I am mostly talking about.  I'm talking about the protagonist as explorer.  About the focus not on his personal adventure, but on the things, events, and cultures that he witnesses.

Take a look at HG Wells' (rightfully) famous work "The Time Machine".  Spoilers ahoy, but the plot is essentially this:  the (unnamed) time traveler goes forward to Earth's far future.  He encounters some friendly little guys and hangs around them for a while doing nothing.  Soon he decides to check out what's underneath the city, but immediately doesn't like the vicious guys he sees there so quickly goes back up top.  Later, he journeys to a far building with one of the nice guys in tow, gets threatened by another of the bad creatures, and decides it's time to go home.  The end.

Almost nothing happens in this book.  There are almost no events in it.  No incident.  Not even any real character development.  The time traveler doesn't get a name.  He doesn't get too affected by the things he's seeing or getting caught up in - besides a "these guys are quite sweet" and "oh no, don't like these guys!"  Because that is not what the book is about.

Like many other early sci-fi books, "The Time Machine" (look also at "Flatland" or "A Honeymoon in Space" - or, to a lesser extent, "A Princess of Mars") the point of this is showing us an alien world.  In this instance, that world is Earth in the future, but that is not usually the case.  What is important to these authors is showing us how a different society could function.  Inventing a unique culture and just extrapolating from that, explaining it.  If such-and-such were the case, this is how it would develop.  It's about the imaginative creation of another reality.

Now that's all well and good (I love those books - why else would I be seeking to emulate them?) but in my own craft I am not interested in world-building.  No, strike that: I'm not primarily interested in world-building.

I do enjoy the imaginative exercise of inventing a whole other planet, a whole other ecosystem, but for myself personally if I'm not using that to tell a story then I am just not interested.

This is where the Flash Gordon thing comes along.

The other aspect I love about pulp is the pure storytelling part.  This is not relevant to the Victorian SF genre (for the most part) but is a big part of the type of pulp I love to read.  Something like The Shadow or Doc Savage.  Something fun and adventurous, that really moves.  Not great literature, but great excitement!

So how does that square with the Victorian exploratory SF genre?  That's what I'm trying to figure out as I go...

Both pulp story types have a similar approach to the main character.  Basically, he's there to be either a non-entity or an archetype, not personally affected much by events because there's no time for an existential crisis while an adventure is going on!  I try to modulate this in "Star Travels" by giving Dr. Jeremiah a personality and a development arc that is worth reading, but which doesn't interfere too much with the next big adventure incident.

But tone and pace, these are things that are tricky to juggle when trying to be both the world-building genre and the fast-paced adventure genre.  I keep picking on Flash Gordon because I love it (especially the Buster Crabbe serials) but also because it does a lot of what I want to do:  big, bold locales and environments, explored in short bursts of adventure by an Earth man out of his depths in a journey across space.

And I want to do that while honoring and continuing the more Victorian focus on exploring how these strange environments work.  And also having the kind of character development and interactions that a modern reader might expect - without doing too much that will weaken the period pulp pastiche of the story.

Even dialog poses a problem.  I want to stay true(ish) to the Victorian period pattern of speech.  More than that: Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe is essentially the kind of insufferable upper-class arrogant type that Bertie Wooster was.  He's not supposed to talk like your typical Englishman at the end of Queen Victoria's reign; he's supposed to sound like an arrogant toff whose experiences bring him down a peg or two.

But that leads to readers not enjoying the phraseology of the work.  (It's all first-person narrated.)  I also allow myself to indulge my penchant for flowery phrasing, and endlessly diverted sentences stuffed full of paranthetical asides.  It's all part of Jermiah's thought process, and so quite justified.  And it just so happens to be a slight exaggeration of my actual writing style, so yay.

My initial intent was to leaven this with more modern talk.  That the galaxy would be full of people who did not need to hold to Jeremiah's stilted Victorian speech patterns.  Thus far, however, I have not found myself resorting to that - and still do not know how well it would mesh with the style of the series.

I'm definitely easing up on the over-emphasis of the Victorian mode of speech.  A reviewer called my period writing sometimes a bit "too cod for comfort" (a criticism on point, and magnificently worded) and subsequent books (this was written about the first) do indeed try to lessen that factor.

Some of it is, of course, purposeful.  I want Jeremiah to at time be an annoying Bertie Wooster type.  In "Enter the Unknown" Captain Kraylik (the aggressor) speaks in a melodramatic Shakespearian mode of dialog.  But do the readers recognize this intent?  With so little actual speech, Kraylik probably comes across less as deliberately grandiose, and more as ridiculously over-written.

The book I'm writing right now has a species who speak in a similarly archaic fashion - and I hope it does not grate too terribly.  It's again on purpose (to mimic the speech patterns of a race who have not had contact with the rest of the galaxy for quite some time) but I recognize that it could annoy the reader.  And so I must make certain to include some characters (I know which ones) who speak in a less formal and distancing fashion.

Anyway, it's a constant struggle, trying to figure out how far in a certain direction to go each time.  I like to think that I aid in this by mixing up styles somewhat.  Book 1 was very HG Wells (in intent) while Book 2 is far more Edgar Rice Burroughs' "John Carter of Mars" in style.  Book 3 goes for steampunk Star Trek, while Book 4 is Flash Gordon filtered through George Griffith.

I hope I am getting the balance right more often than not.  Let me know how it reads to you folks!

Monday, July 6, 2015

Free e-book this week!

Hey there, folks!

From July 6th to July 10th, the new "Star Travels of Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe" book will be free!

It's a short novelette, designed to introduce you to Jeremiah's world if you haven't read any of the books yet.  It's standalone, taking place in the setup which Book 3 will happen in, and requires no prior knowledge of the other books.

After Friday it will be 99c/99p so grab the book now while it's free (even if you don't yet have time to read it).





Sunday, June 28, 2015

Dramatic reading

For anyone who is thinking about buying the book, but hasn't yet, here is an excerpt from the book, read by me:


Upcoming titles

Hey there, Star Travelers.



In about a week or so, I will be publishing a short novelette which takes place between Books 2 & 3 of "The Star Travels of Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe".  It's a stand-alone story showing one life-threatening incident in the life of Jeremiah.

It is called "Introduction to Danger" because it serves as an introduction to Dr. Jeremiah's world - for the first 5 days it will be free, and I will announce its publication here so no one will miss it.  Thereafter, the novelette will retail for the price of 99c (or 99p in the UK).

Following that, toward the end of July, Book 3 - "Beyond the Frontier" - will find its way into the world.  That one is a Star Trek style adventure aboard a freight vessel which encounters a mysterious and powerful being bent on their destruction.

I think it's a good one, and I hope you will, too!

Friday, June 26, 2015

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

"The Savage Planet" now available!

For everyone who's been looking forward to the next installment, here it is:







In this adventure, Dr. Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe finds himself stranded on a primitive world where he is captured and forced into single combat.  Even if he can defeat his opponents, and even if he can subsequently escape, where is there to run?

And how can he get home?

Sunday, June 14, 2015

Planning ahead

Book 2 of the series is getting close to being finished, and my thoughts are already very much caught up in what yet lies ahead.

Next up will be a free promotional short story (which takes place between the second and third books) designed to give people a taste of what the series is like - and hopefully to encourage them to purchase at least one of the novellas as a result!

I have a good idea of the shape of Book 3 - if not all of the details yet - and a vague conception of Book 4 (the locations, and little else).  I know what major event needs to happen in Book 5, and vaguely who the two most important guest characters are.  I also know what one version of Book 6 is (depending on various factors, this may not happen and I may substitute an entirely different storyline altogether).

What I greatly enjoyed was, while waiting for the movie Spy to begin yesterday, realizing that I know exactly how Book 4 ends, and how it leads into Book 5.  The concept was already in place; I just didn't know until that moment that it was the cliffhanger.

So how much should each story actually lead into the next?  By and large, I want the series to be more-or-less continuous - although it is true that there is a gap between Books 2 and 3.  (Which is why the free short story can so easily slot in there.)  I'm unsure for a few of the upcoming stories just how much they should be linked.

Is it better if a novella picks up exactly where the previous one left off?  I seem to prefer that approach, though I can see where there may be drawbacks.  Perhaps I should build in at least a few gaps - just enough to allow some breathing space for the primary character, instead of him constantly hurtling from one crisis to the next.

And yet, that momentum is what I like about the format...

Lots to think about for the future.

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Animated promo

Also, here's the short video I put together to promote the series.


Have fun!



Wednesday, May 27, 2015

First book now on sale!

For everyone who loves a bit of good old-fashion adventure, comes the first in a series of e-novellas in a pulp SF style.








Each monthly installment will be about 20,000 words, which only takes about an hour or so to read.  Just long enough to be a fun ride, but not so long as to outstay its welcome!

I hope you enjoy, and thanks for checking it out.

First installment complete!

Part 1 of "Dr. Jeremiah" is uploaded to Amazon and awaiting processing.

Now, it can take two or three days before it is live and available for purchase, but I am so excited to get this out there to all of you!

I have no idea how much of an audience will be out there for a monthly pulp SF novella series, but will be happy to find out!  I'm committed to at least six months of this series (I expect sales will be very slow indeed until at least three or so installments are out there) and we'll see what happens from there.

As soon as the ebook is out there for real, I will post a link (and a video) here.

Very excited about the start of something new!

(And now it's time to get down to writing Issue #2...)

Monday, May 25, 2015

Redrafting: How Much or How Little

They say that rewriting is harder than writing.  I say that this is an understatement.

In fact, in general I just prefer not to do it.  If there was a way I thought this could be done better, I would have done it that way in the first place.  Right?

Except that that is nonsense.  Just an excuse for me not to have to do the hard work.  Taking a step back and reading through your material can show something to be very different from what you thought you had written.

Parts that took you hours and hours (and, indeed, days) to write, take up only a tiny space on the page.  And that section that you zipped through in an afternoon turns out to be as lengthy a portion as that which you agonized over for weeks.  You thought you had written one thing, but upon reading the result you discover that it is something else entirely.

Thankfully my first installment of "Dr. Jeremiah" looks to be more or less as I had intended it to be, but still a lot of rewriting lies ahead.  Besides the constant polishing (honestly, I could tinker with the wording of my prose for the rest of eternity and still not consider it to be finished) I know there are things that need to be "punched up".  Details I glossed over, characters who all sound alike, you know the kind of thing.  But (despite my antipathy towards the process) this is easy stuff.

How much more difficult it is when what you've written isn't working.  When what seemed just right in outline form takes a very different shape on the eventual page.  Facing the prospect of almost completely reworking from scratch massive segments of your work is daunting to the point of wanting to scrap it in its entirety and start again.  (Sometimes, indeed, this is just best.)

Always on completing a piece of writing (besides the endless tinkering with phraseology) I want to just consider it done and put it out there into the world.  I like to pretend that all of that writing I just went through was "the hard part".  When I know better,  I know that the real work is just beginning.

And I never was all that fond of work.

Sunday, May 24, 2015

A Picture Paints a Thousand Words

As I work hard on the first installment of "Dr. Jeremiah", as well as plotting out the next few, I thought I would show you all a few images representing - not the content of the stories - but the tone of them.

I put these together (rather hurriedly) from some images I found on the internet.  The intention is to give an idea of the type of stories I will be trying to tell.

Hopefully, these will demonstrate the concept, and get you intrigued about the adventures of our favorite Victorian doctor.







Monday, May 18, 2015

New Series introduction

Hi all, and welcome to my new blog about an upcoming series of e-novellas on Amazon called "The Star Travels of Dr Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe".

The series revolves around a Victorian gentleman by the name of (you guessed it!) Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe, who is abducted by aliens and finds himself in outer space and desperate to return home to Mother Earth.

In a series of pulp sci-fi adventures akin to Flash Gordon or John Carter, Jeremiah hops his way across the galaxy in an epic search for his homeworld.  Each novella takes him to a new place, though some characters and events will continue to affect his journey across the books.

At about 20,000 words each, the novellas have just enough room to tell a fun adventure story, while being short enough to read in one sitting.  They will be exciting, adventurous and a whole lot of fun!

We hope you will join Dr Jeremiah Fothering-Smythe on his journey across the stars.  (Coming soon.)