Astrid Maxxim Update

I’m back writing, working on Astrid Maxxim 2, and it feels great.  I’ve been reading through my partially completed stuff and I think I can finish Astrid Maxxim and her Undersea Dome pretty quickly, as I’m already on chapter 11 of 20.

I feel a little like I’m writing Astrid Maxxim for myself, as I’ve not been selling a huge number of them, but I’m enjoying the little world I’m building there.  Maybe it will catch on.  In any case, I think I can finish it before the end of the year and then get back to my adult stories.

Blood Moon now on the Previews Page

Blood Moon is now on the Previews page, which means that it is officially “coming soon.”

I struggled with how much I should give away on the preview page, but everything in the blurb is revealed in the first chapter, so I guess it’s okay.

Former Army Ranger, former tattoo model, and now former P.I. Xochitl McKenna has left Vegas and now finds herself six months pregnant and dancing in a strip club in Boise, the center of a werewolf clan war.  God help any werewolves that get in her way.

I’m so excited to actually get back to writing (as opposed to editing) I’m almost giddy.  And Blood Trade has been bringing in some good sales numbers lately (especially from the UK ((thanks))).

Blood Trade at iBooks

Vegas is going to hell– literally.  Werewolves run through the streets and the vampires are taking over.  Former army ranger/Goth tattoo model/private eye Xochitl McKenna doesn’t like it either, especially when it comes between her and her clients.  But are the vampires and werewolves the greatest threat, or is it something or someone much closer to her?  Warning: Adult Content.

Blood Trade is available at iBooks for just $2.99.  Check it out in iBooks 3.0, or here.

Happy Nevada Day

While millions of others celebrate Halloween, we in Nevada celebrate our state becoming part of the Union: October 31, 1864, signed into law by Abraham Lincoln.

The Voyage of the Minotaur at Kobo

Senta and the Steel Dragon book 1: The Voyage of the Minotaur is available at Kobo Books.  Find it here.

The Story of the Queen of Aerithraine

Hysteria clomped along slowly down the snow covered road for some time.  The orphan was so quiet that for a while I thought he must have fallen asleep.  But at last he stirred and shifted a bit in his seat, which is to say upon Hysteria’s flank.  I myself had been quiet as I remembered the events of that horrible night.

“What are you thinking about?” asked the orphan.

“I’m thinking about that horrible night,” I replied.

“Did you never find your family?”

“No, though I searched for weeks.  My mother was to make me a blueberry pie that night, and I not only have never seen my mother since, I did not get to eat that pie either.”

“I’m sorry I brought up such a painful memory,” he said, then paused.  “Do you suppose that the purple drops on the floor could have been from your blueberry pie?”

“Fiends!” said I.  “To rob a man of his mother and his pie in the same night!”

“Perhaps it were best that we think on something else,” said he.

“Perhaps,” I agreed.

“If you are really such a great story-teller…”

“The greatest in the world.”

“And if the story of the Queen of Aerithraine is a great story…”

“Wonderful.  Exciting.  True.  Profound.”

“Well, maybe you could tell me the story.”

“I get half a crown for that story in Illustria,” said I.

“I have a shiny penny,” said he.

“The story begins in Aerithraine, far to the west, along the coast of the great ocean sea.  From storied Illustria, its capital, to Cor Cottage just outside Dewberry Hills in River County, Aerithraine has been a great and powerful country for some seven hundred years more or less.  By more or less, I mean that it has been more or less seven hundred years that Aerithraine has been a country and that it has been more or less great and more or less powerful during those seven hundred years.  But about fifty years ago, it was less.  That was when the old king died, and as is the way of kings, a new one was crowned.  He was King Julian the Rectifier.

“He was called Julian the Rectifier because he was chiefly interested in rectifying.  He spent most of his time rectifying.  He rectified all over the place.  And he was good at it.  He rectified like nobody else.”

“It means setting things to right,” said the orphan.

“Of course it does and that is just what he did.  Under his reign, the kingdom was prosperous and wealthy.  And, as he wasn’t so interested in warring as in rectifying, there was peace throughout the land.  King Julian had only one son, and he passed to that son the strongest and wealthiest kingdom in all of Duaron, and if it had only remained so, Elleena would have become nothing more than a minor princess perhaps.”

“Which would not have made a half-crown story,” pointed out the orphan.

“That is so.”

“Carry on then.”

“King Justin was the son of Julian.  I hear tell that he was once called Justin the Good and Justin the Wise, though now when story-tellers refer to him, they usually call him Justin the Weak or Justin the Unready.”

“What do you call him?”

“I just call him King Justin,” said I.  “Though I truly believe he may deserve the title Justin the Brave, it is not what the listeners want to hear.”

“Go on.”

“King Justin married a princess from the faraway land of Goth.  The Arch-Dukes of Goth, which is to say the rulers of that land, have for generations, maintained power through a tightly woven web of treaties with its mighty neighbors.  Their chief barter in this endeavor is the marriage of the many female members of the family.  I hear the current Arch-Duke has but four daughters at least as of yet, but his father who was Arch-Duke before him had seventeen, and his father, which is to say the grandfather of the current Arch-Duke had nineteen.”

“That hurts just thinking about it.”

“What?”

“Nothing.  Go on.”

“It must have been quite a coup of diplomacy for the Arch-Duke of Goth to make a match with the King of Aerithraine, but he did, marrying to the King his daughter Beatrix.  And though I hear that the women of that country wear too much make-up, she was never the less accounted a great beauty.  She had pale white skin, raven hair, smoldering eyes, and a gold ring in her nose, as is the fashion in the east.

“King Justin and Queen Beatrix had four strong sons, the eldest of whom was Prince Jared.  He was particularly beloved of the people.  I saw him once when I was a child of four or five, sitting on my poor old father’s shoulders as the Dragon Knights passed on their tall white steeds.  That is to say, I was seated on my father’s shoulders and the Prince was not.  Neither were the Dragon Knights or their steeds.  I don’t remember why the Prince and the knights were in River County.  It was too long ago.  He would have grown to be King upon his father’s death if it was not for…”

“Goblins!”

“Yes, that’s right.  You didn’t say you had heard the story before, though I’ll warrant it wasn’t told as well…”

“No!” screamed the orphan.  “Goblins!  Right there!”

He pointed straight ahead, and sure enough, stepping out of the shadows and into the moonlight were a half dozen creepy little man-things.  They were no more than three feet tall, their over-sized round heads, glowing eyes, and gaping maws giving away their identity.  As they came closer those mouths widened into grins filled with jagged little teeth, looking far too much like the teeth on the blade of a cross-cut saw for my taste.  They brandished what weapons they had, mostly things they had picked up from the ground—a stick, a length of cord with a knot in it.  But a couple of them carried old, discarded straight razors.

Eaglethorpe Buxton Bits

I had been traveling for through the snowy forests of Brest, which of course one might associate with a nicely roasted breast of chicken, but that is not necessarily the case.  To be sure I have had one or two nicely roasted chickens during my travels in this dark, cold country, as I traveled from one little hamlet to the next.  I would say though that I’ve eaten far more mutton and beef stew than roasted
chicken breast.  I suppose this has to do with the fact that eggs are dear, though I’ve seldom found an inn that didn’t offer a fried egg of morning.  In fact,
in distant Aerithraine, where I was once privileged to spend a fortnight with the Queen, I have had some of the finest breast of chicken dinners than any man
has ever enjoyed.  But notwithstanding this, there was a pie.

“In fact, in distant Aerithraine, where I was once privileged to spend a fortnight with the Queen…”  I threw in this line as a tribute to Baron Munchausen, who was one of the inspirations for Eaglethorpe– probably the primary inspiration.  A great story-teller who is also a liar, the Baron frequently compares women to “Catherine the Great, empress of all the Russias, whose hand in marriage I once had the honor to decline.”

The Queen of Aerithraine had already been created in our old D&D game.  I knew her whole history, but I never expected her to become a pivotal character in Eaglethorpe’s story.  But she does.

Previews: Part 7

I forgot to mention in Previews: Part 6, that I have a sequel to Blood Trade in the works.  As you can see, it already has a cover.  I had to secure the rights to the art, so that I would have the same model available for both books.

I have about two chapters of this book done.  Although Blood Trade was difficult to write, these were pretty easy, and I really like them.  Like the first book, this one is very dark and gritty, has vampires, werewolves, and this time zombies.

This will probably go on my official schedule as soon as Eaglethorpe Buxton is published.

Previews: Part 6

Over the past few days, I’ve shown you what’s coming up, but I thought I might give you a glimpse of what is around the corner.  I have many projects in the planning stages (and some in the aborted-start stage).  Here first are the things that I actually have a bit written of:

Tesla’s Stepdaughters Sequel: This story follows Science Police Agent John Andrews as he follows an international conspiracy from the World Capital in Brussels all the way to the largely deserted city of Salt Lake, Utah.  The big question is how much the Ladybugs will play in the story.

Knights of Amathar: Princess of Amathar sequel.  Alexander Ashton and the Amatharians are back, and this time they must team up with the reptilian Zoasians in order to stop a threat from beyond the shell of the artificial planet Ecos.

A war story which is a combination of modern warfare with Norse Mythology.

Nova Dancer: A sci-fi story about a small transport ship and its crew of four very odd cremembers who find themselves in danger when they take on a passenger.  (This is actually about half done.)

Cosmos: This is a big story (possibly a series) set in the same universe as Nova Dancer, about the commander of a space station.  You can make comparisons to Babylon 5 and Star Trek DS9, but I think the universe around the station will be different enough from anything anyone has read before.

Kanana: The Jungle Girl– of course, this just came off my Previews list, but someday I’ll get back to it again.  I find as my life changes, what I want to write about changes too.  I should have finished Knights of Amathar years ago, when I was in that mindset, but now it too will have to wait.