Hysteria is Eaglethorpe Buxton’s horse. I don’t know how I came up with the name, I just remember giggling as I wrote it. It probably goes back to the evocative names in “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum,” an awesomely funny play in which the Romans all have names like Lascivious and Stupendous. Of course, Hysteria is such a great name, because it tells us that she isn’t the steady warhorse a real hero should have. Also hysteria is such a great word, full of meaning and rife with sexism.
Author Archives: wesleyallison
Eaglethorpe Buxton
I don’t know where the idea came from to write an Eaglethorpe Buxton story, but he does owe a lot to several other authors and stores. His origin as a medieval story-teller comes right out of D&D and in fact the world in which he lives (including the Queen of Aerithraine) is from the D&D campaign I started as a young man and continued right up until my kids and I used to play.
Eaglethorpe’s line “The Queen of Aerithraine, with whom I once had the pleasure to spend a fortnight” is pretty much stolen inspired by Baron Munchausen, and his line about Catherine the Great. He also has a bit of Lemony Snicket in him (great books, A Series of Unfortunate Events). I have always loved unreliable narrators and I tried to make Eaglethorpe one. Of course, he is a bit more than unreliable. He’s a complete liar.
In order to make the plot work, Eaglethorpe had to be a bit heroic. He knows how to handle himself with a sword. He can kick the crap out of goblins. But he’s not the hero he thinks he is.
A Change of Pace
I’ve written about the characters from Blood Trade, Women of Power, His Robot Girlfriend, and Astrid Maxxim and her Amazing Hoverbike, and then I started in on Senta and the Steel Dragon. If covered book 0 and book 1, and I don’t know about you, but I’m tired. It’s time for a little change of pace. So starting tomorrow, I’ll talk about the characters from Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess. Then I can go back to Senta with book 2.
The Voyage of the Minotaur: The Steel Dragon
The last character in Senta and the Steel Dragon is the second title character for the series– the Steel Dragon himself. In fact, when the series was originally planned as a single book, the title was going to be “The Steel Dragon.”
The Steel Dragon goes through more change than any other character in the entire series. In Book 0, he only appears as an egg afterall. 🙂 In The Voyage of the Minotaur he is little more than a pet for the sorceress Zurfina, though she saves the term “Pet” for Senta. We don’t even learn the dragon’s name until the very last word of the book.
The Steel Dragon grows (a lot) and increases his intellect and various abilities a great deal from book to book. In the final book of the series, Book 5: The Two Dragons, he is as large as a railroad car, though still tiny compared to the other dragon in the story– yes, he’s one of the two dragons mentioned in the title.
I hoped the 25 regular readers of this blog have enjoyed a look at the characters in this book. In the next few days, I’ll start my way through Book 2: The Dark and Forbidding Land.
The Voyage of the Minotaur: The Clergy
When the Minotaur sails toward the new colony in a faraway land, there are several members of the Church of Kafira who are along to see to the worship needs of the colonists.
Spoiler Alert
Father Ian: Father Ian is the priest on the expedition and he is really only there as cannon fodder– or in this case, dinosaur fodder. From the very beginning, he was intended as a T-Rex milkbone. I actually had a little fun writing him to be more or less incompetent and a bit goofy, knowing that I was going to kill him off later.
Sister Auni: Sister Auni is an acolyte (since in the Church of Kafira, priests and acolytes are both male and female, she takes the place of a nun). She is competent and helpful and a source for healing magic. I made her really skinny to make her a bit distinctive. It’s all the more so because, unlike the laywomen, she doesn’t wear a bustle.
Brother Galen: He is the other acolyte and barely makes an appearance in the story, though he is a bit more important (though not much more visible) in the later books.
The Voyage of the Minotaur is the first book in the Senta and the Steel Dragon series, and is available wherever fine ebooks are sold.
The Voyage of the Minotaur: The Wizards
Update: Misc.
Two things: First, I sometimes get an idea or a scene in my mind and really hold onto it until I need to sit down and write it out. This was the case with a half dozen little beginnings of stories that I might will write assuming I live long enough eventually. Second, I get my best ideas as I’m lying in bed, just about to drift off to sleep. I used to forget them when I fell asleep, but something about being older has allowed me to hold onto them.
The other night I had one such idea and several days later I sat down and wrote the first two pages of what might be a Blood Trade sequel. I don’t think I’ll write anything else on it for a while because I don’t really have a story; I just had a scene. Also, Blood Trade is one of my least popular books. I really feel like I need to focus on books that people want to read– top of the list being the next Robot Wife book.
It did feel really good to write this little bit though– surprising, since I writing the first book was such a wringing experience.





