Update: The Young Sorceress & Astrid Maxxim

Seems like about once every two months, I’m saying that I’m putting The Young Sorceress on hold as I do something else.  It really seems to be a hard book to finish.  I’ve actually considered scrapping it entirely and just making Senta and the Steel Dragon a 4 1/2 book series.  But now that I’ve got almost seven chapters done, I wouldn’t do that.  I am however, setting it aside as I do something else….

I need to get the revision and editing done for Astrid Maxxim.  I want it to be out and available for Christmas, for all those young people who get Kindles, Nooks, and iPads under their trees.  This book is aimed at 10-14 year olds, but hopefully others will like it as well.  It shouldn’t take too long to revise and edit, as it is a relatively short book.  I’ll let you know.

Novelyne Cavendish

Novelyne 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 from 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.”

Xochitl McKenna

Xochitl 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 quirt, 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

The 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.”

Happy Birthday Victoria

Behind every moderately successful man is a woman who wishes he was more successful, and did his fair share of housework (and didn’t think that when he did it, he was “helping her out”), exercised more, and wasn’t nearly as sarcastic.

Happy Birthday Dear.

Dominic Zielinski

I love my characters.  I guess that’s because they are my creations.  I like the heroes and villains both, but the characters I really like are broken in some way.  I had a lot of fun writing Dominic Zielinski, the former SEAL, FBI agent in my book Blood Trade.  He is one ass-kicking martial artist, but he’s also pretty wacky.  He’s got more than a touch of OCD.  He keeps his bills in order, first by denomination and then by serial number, and dutifully registers them on wheresgeorge.com.  When he takes the coins out of his pocket, he neatly stacks them on the dresser.  When he eats, he takes his bites in a particular order and has to have a drink of water after a certain number of bites.  He refuses to eat round food, though if he cuts up something cylindrical and the pieces are round, that’s okay.  Incidently, the name Zielinski came from someone I knew as a kid.  I don’t know where Dominic came from– just seemed to fit.

Characters

I’ve talked again and again about how much I love my characters.  I’ve heard some authors say they feel their characters are like real people to them.  My characters are much more than real to me.  I suppose that comes from seeing them on the inside as well as the outside.  In any case, over the next few weeks, I’m going to take a look at as many of my characters as I can.  Instead of starting at the beginning, I’m going to start at the end.  I’m going to start with the characters of Blood Trade and work backwards through my books.

Blood Trade: Chapter 9 Excerpt

Even though she wasn’t hungry and had said that she wasn’t hungry, Xochitl did get a plate and like most buffet diners, piled it with far more food that she was actually capable of consuming.  She was already eating when Dominic returned to their table, balancing three plates.

“You know, you can make more than one trip,” she said.

“No need.”

He carefully set out the platters.  On the first, he had a Denver omelets and a piece of ham.  On the second was a waffle and two cheese blintzes, all covered in syrup.  The third plate had two pieces of buttered toast and a small pile of grits.  After sitting down, the FBI agent looked around expectantly.

“She’ll be around to get your drink order in a few minutes,” said Xochitl.  “We can go ahead and start eating.”

He frowned, but turned his attention to his food and began carefully cutting it into pieces.  The omelet, the ham, and the waffle were all transformed into small triangular bites.

“I got pancakes,” said Xochitl.  “I know I said I wasn’t hungry, but you can’t say no to pancakes.”

“I don’t really like pancakes,” he said.

“You’re kidding.  I’ve never actually met anyone who didn’t like pancakes before.  How about hotcakes?”

“That’s the same thing.”

“You have a waffle.  Don’t waffles taste pretty much just like a pancakes?”

“Waffles are airier,” he said.  “And pancakes are round.  I don’t really like round food.”

“Those blintzes are round.”

“They’re cylindrical, though granted, when I cut them up the pieces will be round—bite-sized though.  I don’t mind so much it they’re bite-sized.”  He looked around again for the server.  It was not a woman who waited on them but an older black man in a white apron.

“What can I get you to drink?” he asked as he approached.

“A glass of milk and an orange juice,” said Xochitl.

“Water,” Dominic said.

Xochitl was almost full before the waiter brought her drinks, though that didn’t cause her any discomfort, unlike Dominic.  He didn’t begin eating until he had his water, and by that time Xochitl thought that his food might well be cold, though he didn’t complain about it.  Just as she expected, he took a sip of his beverage after every three bites of his meal.  He ate his ham, then his omelet, then his waffle, blintzes, toast, and at last he started in on his grits.

“What is that?”

“Grits.”

“How can you eat that?  Nobody even knows what that is.”

“It’s grits.  It’s made of corn.”

“It doesn’t look like corn.”

“Of course it does,” he said.  “Look closely.  It’s very much like corn meal.  They shuck the corn, soak it in a weak lye solution, dry it, grind it, and reconstitute it with boiling water.  Some people eat it with sugar, but in the south we eat it with butter, salt, and pepper.”

“What are you talking about?  You’re not from the south.”

“I started eating grits when I was at Virginia Beach.”  He gave her a studied frown.  “If we’re done talking about my food, I’d like to know something about your case.”

Music

I like to listen to music when I write– instrumental, because songs with words distract me.  I must have listened to Ravel’s Bolero about 50 times as I was writing Astrid Maxxim.  My wife kept walking by and saying “that’s not the right music for that book.”  This is because she knows the music from the Blake Edward’s movie 10.  The Bolero scene in that movie is a really great one, but that’s not what I think about when I listen to it.  I usually think of building action– like that scene in (Arnold’s) Conan the Barbarian, where they sneak into James Earl Jones’s orgy.  Although they had new music for that scene, if you watch it I think you will see, they were copying Ravel.

Anyway, some of the other tracks I listen to while writing include: One Million Miles Away by J. Ralph, the title theme from Zulu, and The Kiss from Last of the Mohicans.

What’s up with those grades?

A fellow teacher found this little gem.  Whoever the artist is, they pegged it right on the nose.