Characters: Omega Woman

Women of Power NewOmega Woman (Omega Girl until her recent 21st birthday) is one of the most powerful and popular superheroes in the world.  This is particularly annoying since she is now dating Perihelion, All American Girl’s ex.  Omega Woman has flawless silver skin and golden hair that reaches almost to the floor.  She is hauty and disdainful of everyone she thinks is below her… which is everyone.

Omega Woman has super-strength, invulnerability, flight, and can shoot Omega Rays from her fingertips.

Characters: Perihelion

Women of Power NewIn Women of Power, Perihelion is the ex-boyfriend of All American Girl. Though we are not privy to why they split up, they did so about six months before the story started. I have a feeling that the breakup was either Stella’s idea or her fault, and now she regrets it. Within a few months of their split, Perihelion began dating Omega Girl.

Perihelion is extremely good looking and is the spokesmodel for a line of sharp Italian suits. He has the super strength and invulnerability, but his great ability is flight. He is the fastest flyer of all the supers.

Characters: Melanippe

Women of Power NewThere are several mythological characters named Melanippe, but Stella’s (All American Girl in Women of Power) mother is the sister of Hippolyta, queen of the Amazons. She has an on-again/off-again relationship with Theseus (Yes, that Theseus) and has setteled into a life of hedonism on Mount Olympus, much to Stella’s shame. “And my mother is an Amazon, which I used to think meant she was a warrior woman, but apparently just means she’s some kind of immortal hoe-bag.” Of course this means that if you were to mix the continuity of my little story with that of DC Comics, then Stella and Wonder Woman would be cousins, which is cool, because Wonder Woman has always been one of my personal faves.

Characters: Hipparion

Women of Power NewIn Women of Power, I wanted real mythological figures for Stella’s parents, but I didn’t want them to be major mythological figures that everyone knows. Her father is the demigod Hipparion, who is mentioned once or twice in the mythology texts but has no surviving stories about him. His name means “pony” in greek, so he must have had something to do with the being a lord of horses or something.

I had fun playing with the idea that nobody on Earth remembers him, even though he thinks he is a major figure in history. Like most mythological fathers, Hipparion has only a passing interest in his offspring, and expects to be called on for magical armor or weapons, but not emotional support.

Characters: Sky Girl

Women of Power NewLinda Ford, also known as Skygirl, is the second character (title character if you will) of Women of Power. She is the daughter of Earth’s greatest hero, Skyman, who was killed defending the Earth from an alien invasion. Her mother was the evil Madame Mesmer, who seduced Skyman, but Linda was raised by her step-mother Doris Drake-Ford. She has all the powers of her father (though perhaps not as strong as him in any area). She has super strength, invulnerability, supersonic flight, super breath, x-ray vision, heat vision, and several other kinds of super vision. She is vulnerable to disease and poison and to Polarite, the fragmented remains of her father’s home planet.

Linda lives her life seemingly unaware that the world knows who she is. She wears a brown wig and sensible clothes as a disguise, even though anyone can find her name at the top of the Skygirl Wikipedia page. She tends to be naive and silly, much to the annoyance of All American Girl.

Linda was a very fun character to write. She makes a great foil for Stella (AG). She is of course a parody and tribute to super characters like Supergirl, though personality wise, she’s more Mary Marvel. My favorite little detail was that when Skygirl and All American Girl play rock, paper, scissors, All American Girl always wins. She knows that Skygirl will always pick rock, because anyone who has to worry about a rock that can kill them all the time will always pick rock.

Troubles in (Mac) Paradise

I updated my two Macs to OS X El Capitan this week.  While my iMac is better than ever, and had no problem, my little macbook air decided to turn into an expensive brick.  Between the fact that Macs are pretty easy to troubleshoot and the fact that it wasn’t my first computer crash rodeo, I had it back up and running after about 6 hours work.  That includes getting all my apps and files restored.

I was really happy that I bought Microsoft Office from Amazon.  I was able to redownload it and get my install key from the Amazon site lickety-split.  Nice to have them looking out for me.

Characters: All American Girl

Women of Power NewStella O’Clare AKA All American Girl, is the main character of my book Women of Power. Stella is the daughter of an immortal Amazon and a Greek demigod. As a child, she was exiled from Mount Olympus for being unable to get along with the other children, landing on Earth in Chicago’s O’Clare Blvd. She’s intelligent, sarcastic, and quick to anger.

All American Girl has super strength, invulnerability, and the ability to fly. She is immune to poison, disease, and any form of magic. Like all superheroes, she wants to help mankind, but being a hero is also a business. She wants to be the star of her own superhero magazine and to reach the top ten of the New York Times Superhero list.

As the story begins, Stella is having a particularly rough time as she has recently broken up with her boyfriend, the super superhero Perihelion. To make matters worse, while Stella has been moping around after the breakup, Perry has immediately taken up with Omega Girl.

I loved writing All American Girl. She is both a parody and an homage to my favorite heroes from the comics.

Characters: Novelyne Cavendish

Blood TradeNovelyne Cavendish is a two hundred year old vampire who works as a secretary in Sin City Detective Agency. I really didn’t want this book to have a “good” vampire. The whole basis of the book is that vampires are bad. However, Novelyne is at least trying to be good– to go “vegetarian.”

Novelyne’s last name is Cavendish because I wanted her to be distantly related to Xochitl, so an Irish surname seemed the best way to express that. Her first name I have been saving for a long time to use on a character. I originally heard the name as the friend of Conan creator Robert E. Howard– Novalyne Price Ellis. I changed the spelling as an in-joke… because she’s a character in a novel.

Novelyne is short and blond, both because I wanted to play against the usual vampire type, but also because I was thinking about how people two hundred years ago were for the most part smaller. I also gave her a little catch phrase of her own– “He’s really, really nice. I really, really like him.”

Characters: Xochitl McKenna

Blood TradeXochitl McKenna is the main character of Blood Trade.  She is a private eye and Goth tattoo model in a very dark version of Las Vegas.  She is a former army ranger, and as such is an excellent hand-to-hand fighter and marksman, and she has a very personal hatred of vampires.

Xochitl’s first name is Nahuatl (Aztec) for flower.  Her last name is Irish.  This reflects the family heritage that she barely remembers of a half Mexican, half African American mother and a blond, blue eyed father.

As a tattoo model, Xochitl is the canvas for her friend, tattoo artist Sid Case.  She has a variety of tattoos including a very fuctional tattoo of a cross on her neck, but Sid’s masterwork is her right sleeve which features a pastiche of the macabre including the images of Stephen King, Batman, Betty Page, and Marilyn Monroe.

One little quirk that Xochitl has is that she can’t leave cash laying around.  If she sees money, she has to pick it up.  This sometimes includes money in someone else’s wallet.  Originally I did this because I wanted all the characters in this book to have some bizarre quirk, but it became something important for the plot.

Blood Trade is available wherever fine ebooks are sold for $2.99.  It is recommended only for adults.

Blood Trade: Chapter 11 Excerpt

Blood TradeThe morning light streaming into the window was hitting Xochitl right in the face, but that wasn’t what had awakened her.  It was an annoying buzz.  It took her almost a full minute to realize that it was her cell phone ringing.  It took her another minute to find it lying amid the bedclothes.  By then it had stopped ringing.  She pushed the call back button and put her head back on her pillow, rolling to the side to keep her eyes out of the sun.

“Zielinski.”

“You called?”

“I did.  I thought you might still be up,” he said.

“I’m getting ready to get up soon.  I’ve been asleep.”

“Really.”

“Did you call me to tell me how much you miss me?” she asked.  “Are you like a star-crossed lover now?”

“You mean starry-eyed lover, and no, I called to check in, and to make sure you’re alright.  A lot’s been happening there.  I guess the bureau picked the wrong time to call me in.”

“Or the exact right time,” she replied.  “Do you know what’s going on?”

“That’s what the meeting was all about.  It seems the vampires have been planning on supplanting the Chicago mob for some time.  The bureau has been following it.  They just didn’t know when it was going to happen.  Well, it happened.  Tony the Pipe is dead and it looks like just about everybody who was working for him is too.  Israel is running the show now.  He cut off the head and simply took over the organization.”

“That sounds awfully risky, even for a vampire,” said Xochitl.

“Maybe.  But he’s done it before.  He did it during prohibition, in the twenties, in Detroit.  He took over an entire organization smuggling booze into the U.S. from Canada.”

“That would be when those pictures you showed me were taken.”

“Right.  And one more thing… apparently Novelyne was right there with him.”

“She was Bonny to his Clyde?”

“Well, they had a relationship,” said Zielinski.  “My question is… Is she in on this with him now?”

“I don’t think so,” replied Xochitl.

“But you’re not sure.”

“No.  I’m not sure.”