His Robot Girlfriend – Now on Manybooks

His Robot Girlfriend is now available at Manybooks.net, the third distribution point. The great thing about having it here is that Manybooks offers so many different formats to choose from. You can download it here.

Twitter Tracker

I’ve been getting some very nice feedback on my books lately. I thought I would share a couple of tweets that have recently been “tweeted” on Twitter.

BTW “His Robot Girlfriend” is still very popular at Feedbooks.

I love your books

dude people love your shit! It’s true

You can follow me on Twitter @ HistoryWes.

Amathar – Meznarks and Oindrag

The Meznarks and Oindrag are two races of beings who lived in the great hollow world of Ecos long ago. Although the Amatharians study them, they don’t know exactly what they look like because both races are extinct. They in fact, wiped each other out. Being young and idealistic when I came up with the story of Amathar, I wanted to showcase two such mutually homicidal races as my own little bit of commentary on the then present Cold War.

We had not walked too many miles when Noriandara Remontar called to me. As I looked up, she pointed to a large object in the sky. I thought at first that the object was an Amatharian or Zoasian battleship, since it was about the same size. It was not one of the air vessels. It was instead a floating city. While the bottom was far from smooth, with openings, windows, and protrusions, the top was a jagged skyline of tall buildings shooting up toward the noon day sun.

“Have you ever seen a floating city like that?” Noriandara Remontar asked.

“No,” I replied. “You?”

“I have heard of them. They were built long ago by the Meznarks, contemporaries of the Orlons. They built hundreds of floating cities and sailed all over Ecos, until they angered a race of beings far away known as the Oindrag who hunted the Meznarks down and destroyed them. There are numerous artifacts from a fallen Meznark city at the Tree Clan Museum in Amathar, but I don’t think anyone has ever come across a city still in flight.”

“Are the Oindrag still around?”

“I believe they are also extinct.”

Ebooks Just Published

I’ve mentioned Ebooks Just Published before. If you are looking for something new to read, this is a great place to visit. They highlight a new book about twice a week. Some are free and some are for sale. If you are an author who has self published an ebook, this site is also a great resource for you. You can present your work here and get quite a bit of interest generated.

Free eBooks at Munseys

Just a reminder of one of the many great places to get wonderful eBooks for free. Munseys at http://www.munseys.com/ adds five books a day to their growing library of thousands of books. Stop in and check them out. And for you who don’t yet have a portable reading device, you can download the books as pdfs and read them on your computer.

Back in the Classroom

Well, I’ve been back in the classroom for a week now, and I have to say that it looks like a pretty good start to the school year. The kids look bright and I’m feeling full of energy, at least until I get home. This of course is not my classroom. Mine is crammed full of desks so that there is no room for a piano, let alone all that room up front for the teacher to move around it. I’ll post some pics of my classroom next week.

New Deluxe Publishing at Smashwords

Smashwords has a new publishing program that hopefully will sell ebooks to outlets like bn.com and elsewhere. My books are already up and set to go with the new system. I’ll let you know when they start appearing in new locations.

Sony Walkman

The Sony Walkman is back, this time as an mp3 player. I just got an 8 gig player, the same one seen above. I got it at Walmart for about $90, and I love it. Along with MediaMonkey it is a great music system.

Princess of Amathar – Chapter 28 Excerpt

There were six more of the monsters standing around me, and they lunged for me as a group. I swung my sword through the body of the closest, while pushing the next back with my left hand. I recoiled as I felt the thick coating of slime which covered the thing’s body. At that moment, three others rushed forward and I was knocked back against the tree. I began hacking with abandon, chopping here and there into the bodies of my attackers. This caused them to step back a few feet. At least those who were still able to step back did so. One was lying on the ground unmoving, and two others were flopping around as they tried to get back to their feet.
While they took a moment to decide who would be the first among them to die, I prepared myself for their next assault. When they lunged forward, I jump up, tucking and rolling forward, to land behind them. Then with a spinning cut, I decapitated two in one blow. When I say decapitated, I mean that I sliced off at least the top half of what I would call the head, for I repeat it was difficult to say just where the body ended and the head began. There was no neck. The single remaining unscathed amphibian turned toward the river, and it was with fierce satisfaction that I noted none of those who remained would ever swim again. I ran after the last remaining man-frog, the anger born of being taken from peaceful sleep into bloody battle hazing over my better judgment. I could have easily overtaken the flopping limping gate of the slimy entity, even with out my gravity enhanced speed.
Before I had gone more than two steps, I stopped in my tracks. Stuck into the ground was Noriandara Remontar’s sword. I pulled it out of the ground and looked at it. It was quiet. There was no sign of the soul within, and I felt my heart ache, even though I knew this really signified nothing. The soul would have been quiet even if I had been using it in battle. The soul only awaked when used by its chosen knight. I put the Princess’s sword in my sheath, and continued.
My scum-covered adversary was gone, but I knew approximately where it had entered the river. On the bank were a great many tracks. This was apparently both the point of egress and entrance. The water here was fast and deep. Before I could think too much about it, admittedly something that is usually not too much of a problem, I took a deep breath and dived in.
The water was not too cold, though the temperature was lower than the air had been. I swam deeper and deeper– the river was far less shallow than I had supposed. I reached a level at which my ears began to hurt. The water was muddy though well lit by the noon-day sun. It seemed to me that I was able to hold my breath longer than I had whenever swimming on my home planet. Perhaps this was due somehow to the gravitational conditions of Ecos, or perhaps it just seemed that way because of all the adrenaline pumping through my system. Still, I was just at the point when I thought that I would need to surface for a breath, when I noticed an opening in the rocky bed of the river.
I swam down into the large hole and discovered a tunnel, which went downward some twenty feet and then turned. I realized that I didn’t have enough air in my lungs to last much longer, so I returned to the surface and took several deep breaths. I then hyperventilated for ten or fifteen seconds to fill my blood with oxygen. Now I was as ready as I could be. I dived back to the bottom of the river only to find that I had been swept down stream. I tried to go against the current, but it would have been impossible even had I not been encumbered by equipment and clothing. In the end I was forced to swim to the shore and walk upstream to the place where I had jumped in and do it all again. This time I went right to the bottom and into the submarine passage. At the bottom of the shaft, I gave myself a strong push off the wall and into the tunnel, and then swam for all I was worth. I didn’t know how long that passage might be, for I suspected that the creatures that regularly used it, while air breathers, were able to remain submerged for a long time. It was certain that they were far better designed for life under the water than I was. It wasn’t long before I was wishing that I had taken off my boots.

Senta and the Steel Dragon – Illustration

She didn’t see a policeman around, but they were always around somewhere, in their stiff blue uniforms, with their tall blue helmets, carrying their stout black cop clubs—just waiting to use them to thump someone littering or spitting on the street or (at other times of the year) someone picking the fruit from the trees which grew behind their own little wrought iron fences.
Images Copyright 2009 by Clipart.com