Women of Power is available at Barnes & Noble. It’s just 99 cents. Find it here.
Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess
Download Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Elven Princess for free at Smashwords. Find it here.
Tesla’s Stepdaughters on your nook
Tesla’s Stepdaughters is available for your nook at Barnes and Noble for just 99 cents. Find it here.
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.
Blood Trade at Barnes & Noble
Blood Trade is available at Barnes & Noble for nook. Find it here.
The Young Sorceress at Kobo
Senta and the Steel Dragon is now available at Kobo Books for $2.99. Find it here.
The World of Eaglethorpe Buxton
Here is a very early map of Duaron, the continent where Eaglethorpe Buxton has most of his adventures. (Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Amazons takes place hundreds of miles to the south on the continent of Ennedi.)
You can see Aerithraine (spelled without the e at the end) is in the far west. Brest, where Elven Princess takes place is right about in the middle– part of the “fallen lands.” Lyrria where Sorceress takes place is on the south coast. Theen and Goth, two places mentioned in the story but not visited (except maybe in the new book) are in the southeast.
I have a later, much more detailed map, but it’s too much to scan, and who would be interested really anyway? I could easily have written Eaglethorpe with no map at all, as I (and Eaglethorpe) play pretty fast and loose with the geography.
Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Sorceress
Download Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Sorceress for free from Smashwords. Find it here.
Eaglethorpe Buxton Update
Today I reached the halfway point of Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Day of the Night of the Werewolf (draft). It’s taken me eight days to get this far. That may sound like I’m writing incredibly fast, but these stories are quite short at about 20,000 words each or 50 typed almost single-spaced pages (I use 1.15 spacing when I write). So that’s three pages per day.
Maybe another week to finish this draft. Then I’ll do a revision of this story, and then a revision of all of them together, and then two editing passes. So we’re looking at mid to late November, which sounds good to me. I really want to have it available before December for the holiday season.
When I do the whole revision pass, it will give me a chance to improve some of the earlier stories, as well as make them fit together. I like Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Amazons, but it didn’t quite reach the level I wanted. Hopefully I can get it closer to what I originally intended. On the other hand, Eaglethorpe Buxton and the Queen of Aerithraine, I think, turned out far better than I hoped.
I’ll keep you updated. Thanks.
Eaglethorpe Buxton Bits
It was just about time for elevenses when I spied two snowshoe hares sitting beside the road munching on a few sprigs of green which poked out of the snow.
“Hop down,” I told the orphan.
“Why?”
“I want you to get a rock and bean one of those hares,” said I. “If you can kill it, we can eat.”
“I don’t know that I can hit it.”
“It can’t be more than thirty feet away. Any boy could hit it with a rock from this distance.”
“I don’t know…”
“Come on boy.”
The child slid to the ground and then picked up a likely looking stone from a small pile not too far from her feet and hefting it back, launched it in the general direction of the hares. She didn’t have much heft, and with the lob she put on the rock, if it had hit the hare, it would have done nothing more than make it angry. Of course there was no chance of that, since the course of the missile was off to the right by a good thirty degrees. The hares started and took off over the snow, disappearing among the trees.
I am usual content to rip off pay homage to Shakespeare when I’m writing Eaglethorpe Buxton, but here I’m stealing from paying tribute to Mark Twain. I have a heavily annotated copy of Huckleberry Finn that I’ve read a dozen times, and this little bit comes right out of Huck’s attempt to “borrow” some things when he’s dressed as “Sarah-Mary.”