The Unremarkable Squire to Be Published

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Well, the website’s not perfect yet, but it’s functional.

Functional enough for an announcement, at least.

My fanasty novel “The Unremarkable Squire” is set to be published this December by Barking Rain Press.

Here’s the back cover copy:

A squire’s oath is to be of service… but to whom? In the kingdom of Basileon, an unremarkable and emotionally detached young man named Obed Kainos is about to stumble into adventure—quite against his will. When the knights of the realm gather in a quest to search for the lost Armor of Arkelon, Obed is chosen at random to replace Sir Lance Valentino’s recently deceased squire. But while trying to perform his menial tasks faithfully, the young squire becomes entangled in the plots of mages, thieves, and kings. And that’s just his first week on the job. Unfortunately for Obed, his indifference cannot save him from his new oath. For despite his enigmatic personality (or perhaps because of it), he manages to attract a band of misfits to his cause— the ugly, the arrogant, the clumsy, and the cowardly—putting the legendary armor within the grasp of one who never wanted anything at all.…

You can read the full press release here: http://www.barkingrainpress.org/squire-acquisition/

Or, even better, sign up for the free preview here: http://www.barkingrainpress.org/squire-preview/

And, if for some reason you’re still hesitating, you could read my wife’s thoughts on the novel back from over a year ago when it was still  just a file on my hard drive: http://natashasshelf.blogspot.com/2010/11/squire.html

Old-Fashioned Stories

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Discovered in my journal:

Maybe I’m wrong. I’m not an expert. But it seems that so much of fiction today, deep down, is about me.

Yes, fiction is personal. Yes, each writer has his own voice, his own point of view. That’s fine. That’s how it should be.

But this me-ness is more than that. It’s the sense that a book has to break boundaries, be different, burst the language, repulse you and play into your secret fantasies. That a novel must be a manifesto, as if to say: I wrote this, aren’t I clever?

I don’t want new stories. I want old ones. I don’t want a jumbled plot for the sake of impressing me. And, most of all, I don’t want your truth. I want the Truth.

See, that’s the crux (Biblical allusion intended). Tell me a story, give me an adventure, help me dream, but give me Truth. Because I believe Truth is eternal and immutable. I don’t think it’s old-fashioned just because it’s been around for awhile. I don’t want mystic mumblings on trying my best and everything happens for a reason.

If I’m not telling God’s Truth, I might as well keep my mouth shut.

They Come in Pairs (An Update)

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letter writing is a dying art
Photo Credit: Linda Cronin via Compfight

Dear Reader,

If you know me at all, you know that I tend to have my hands in one too many projects at a time.

It’s May, and I’m looking forward to summer, when my teacher job will be over…and that college course I’m helping out with, too. I love them both, but they’re two of the many things that keep me from updating this blog.

Two of my other distractions are my son and daughters, but luckily there’s no end in sight to that distraction, which makes me happy. And they’ll always come first. Too bad for you.

Also, I have two projects in the works. I’m waiting for the official time to announce the one, and the second you’ll get a peek at by summer’s end (fingers crossed).

But I haven’t forgotten poor Strin and Fred. Last week, I actually made a smidge of progress on book 3, and once I have a chunk of time, I’ll upload chapters.

In the meantime, please, please, please bug me.

Your faithful storyteller,

Nick

Happily Ever After

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“…And with the Lord Grigory’s army defeated, the land of Netherfield was freed from the curse of fog and forgetfulness. Prince Henry arose, discarding his broken sword, and seeing the maid Kerra there, took her by the hand and lifted her up. The sun was dawning, and Henry and Kerra looked into the reddening sky full of hope. And they lived happily ever after.”

Kevin let the final words settled in for a moment. “All right, Cam, time for bed.”

His son nodded hesitantly. Kevin kissed him on the forehead. “Love you, Cam.” He was about to turn off the light, but he could tell Cam was thinking very hard about something. “What’s the matter?”

“What happens next?”

“That’s the end of the story. They live happily ever after.”

Cam processed this. “But what’s that mean?”

“Well, Henry and Kerra get married. It’s a beautiful wedding, and the whole kingdom is happy for them.”

“And then what?”

Kevin knew he shouldn’t have ended the story so abruptly, but it was way past Cam’s bedtime and a sink of dirty dishes waited in the kitchen. “When the fog went away, all the bandits and evil niggle-wums crawled back into the Lost Forest. Eventually, the Green Men drove them out of the Forest completely. Everyone was safe.”

Cam was looking more and more worried. “And then what?”

Kevin didn’t have time for this. After dishes, he had emails to send, not to mentioned he’d hardly had five minutes of time with Mindy since morning.

“Well…after five years or so, Henry and Kerra had a baby boy. They named him…Yorick, because he was a very funny boy. He told jokes and did tricks and made everyone laugh, especially his parents. So the kingdom was even happier than it was before.”

Cam nodded glumly. “And he lived happily ever after?”

Cam didn’t know yet he would be getting a sister. Best to start planting seeds now. “Yeah, he did. And he had a sister named Melody, who could sing and dance, and whenever the people were tired of laughing, they listened to Melody sing and dreamed the most wonderful dreams. Yorick loved Melody very much, and they were best friends. Henry and Kerra and Yorick and Melody made the most wonderful family. Henry taught his son how to hunt, and they explored the royal forests together, and at night they watched the stars and Henry taught Yorick about the moon and the planets. During the day, sometimes Melody and Yorick would be gone for hours, playing hide and seek in the secret passages of the castle, and Kerra would pretend to be a giant, looking for them.”

Cam’s face was starting to brighten, and despite the hands on the clock, Kevin was losing himself in the story again. “Then, one day, Yorick led his sister down to the basement. He held her hand because she was young and still scared of the dark. But Yorick wasn’t scared of the dark. He laughed at it. They went down the damp steps, and down some more, and still down, lower than they had ever been before. Melody begged Yorick to lead them back up, but Yorick laughed her fears away. ‘Momma will never find us here,’ he cried. ‘She’ll stomp and huff and grumble all her pretend things, but she will not find us. She will look and look, and then we’ll return, and we’ll play such a joke on her!’ Even in the deep darkness, his eyes twinkled, and when his eyes twinkled, Melody could not help but play along.

“Down stairs and more stairs they went. Water dripped with an eerie, plonk!, plonk!, and the rank smell twisted Melody’s little nose. Their slippered feet sank into muck. They had reached the bottom. ‘Let us go back now,’ Melody said. ‘We have been gone a long time.’

“‘Yes, you are right,’ Yorick said, pretending not to be afraid. ‘We will surprise Momma plenty.’ But when they turned around, the stairs were gone! There was only a wall. They were lost.”

Kevin stopped there, his mind already spinning the next night’s adventure. “And now it’s time for bed, young man.”

“All right, daddy.” He was smiling sleepily. Kevin turned off the lights.

“Daddy?”

“It’s time for bed, Cam.”

“I was afraid happily ever after was going to be boring.”

“It never is. Good night.”

Free Short Story Collection download!

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A holiday gift just in time for Christmas!

I’ve compiled five of my favorite short stories into a free PDF, Dreams & Visions. Holding the collection together is a sense of wonder, desire, and mystery–a sense that something exists that we haven’t quite found yet.

The stories included are

  • The Memory – It was a memory more precious than any other she had, and it drove her to attempt what none had ever done.
  • Lunatic Pandora – One day, the sky began to fall. And that was only the beginning.
  •  The Empty House – While looking through her dead father’s old journals, Susanna discovers a secret his dementia could not erase.
  • A Madman’s Tale – Mad scientist Victor Von Victorstein explores alternate dimensions for wealth, beauty, and knowledge–with spotty results.
  • The Vision of Prince Frederick – A childhood meeting with a girl changes the Prince’s life forever.
Please, download! Tell your friends! Leave comments!
And Merry Christmas!

[note]The free version has expired. Sorry! I should have other free collections in the future.[/note]

Kindle version of The Isle of Gold Now Available!

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Yes, The Isle of Gold was already available nearly everywhere else ebooks are sold, but I finally tackled the Amazon publishing system, which is, thankfully, quite simple. So, if you’re a Kindle junkie, my novella of mythic adventure is now available for you too!

I’m hoping, actually, to make a number of short stories and novellas available in 2012, some for free. I have a lot of stories that I think people might enjoy reading, if they can just get their hands on them.

Until then, have a Merry Christmas!

 

A Knock-Out Story

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“…the meteor shower will hit atmosphere in three minutes. If you’re just tuning in, NASA, in conjunction with the military, succeeded in breaking up the oncoming asteroid mere seconds before the window of opportunity expired. Authorities still expect a few of the larger fragments to survive atmospheric entry….”

“SHUT THAT GARBAGE OFF!” Editor-in-Chief of The Daily Sentinel hurled a stapler at the TV news anchor, adding another crack to the spider-webbed screen. “NOW!”

Macaulay, the newest of the disposable interns, launched himself onto Patricia’s desk in an attempt to reach the off switch. The screen hung from the ceiling, inconveniently high; no one had seen the remote in three weeks. Macaulay slipped on the phone and tumbled headfirst off the desk, but his fingers managed to disrupt the ancient TV’s fragile state of being. It went blank.

Matt and Patricia help Macaulay extricate himself from the trash can and filing cabinet.

“I don’t hear anything!” Editor-in-Chief Rick Blackney fumed.

The crowded newsroom filled with the relentless battering of keyboards that was David’s harp to Blackney’s frustrated soul. Of course, one had to be careful. Last Thursday, Jon in advertising had pounded away with abandon, typing nonsense with flair. (Everyone typed nonsense when Rick was in one of his “Black-ney” moods; sense didn’t come quickly enough.) This time, however, Blackney noticed; Jon put in his notice.

“I’m sick and tired of those fame jockeys destroying our readership. Bloated opinions, fortune cookie sound bytes—I hate it. I loathe it. Shallow, pretty people for shallow, pretty pictures. What happened to news? Tell me that!”

They had all heard it before. Eddie, who had started as a delivery boy before most of the others had been delivered, kept a revered piece of office scripture in his desk: a tally of every rousing, ranting Blackney speech made over the last 25 years, with scrawled snippets of the best lines.

Blackney launched into the incentive phase: “First one to pitch me a new angle on the asteroid story gets a day off, paid. Write me a front-page spread, a bona fide award winner. Let’s kick these emptied-headed TV mannequins in the teeth so hard they have to eat Jello the rest of their lives. Give me a knock-out story!”

The typing slowed to the clickety-clack of a dozen trains passing each other.

“Now! Get on the phone. Drive out to the site. Take pictures. Interview victims. Dig up dirt. Bradley, what’ve you got?”

Bradley was always a bit slow at this stage of the proceedings. “Ah…cost of repairs to the city, maybe tie it in with infrastructure investments and the lagging economy.”

“Awful! Horrendous! Patricia, something good.”

“How it feels through a child’s eyes. Wonder, fear, maybe tilt it a bit toward the apocalyptic.”

“Good luck with the quotes. Kids aren’t scared of nothin’ anymore, even if they’ve happened to look up from their 3DSPSP thingies long enough to realize an asteroid nearly crushed the planet. B2, tops.”

“Snapshots of ‘Where Were You When The Asteroid Struck.’”

“Shut up, Macaulay. Let the grown-ups do the talking. Go change toner cartridges or something. Matt?”

“Religious cults and the asteroid. Round up some of the weirdoes from downtown, maybe that church on Fifth.”

“Okay, perhaps. But the networks will have beat you to it and done it better. People love the bizarre, the sensational, but it won’t stick, not in print, not even on screen. It’s like the Thin Mints the Girl Scouts sell. You eat ten of them and don’t remember a thing and now you’re dying of heart disease. Twenty-four-hour news cycle, my—”

“Actually, I was thinking—”

But Blackney had reach stage three, which Patricia liked to call the “Independence Day.”

“We need to find something that’ll get in their head, people. Something local, something universal. It’s got to be tragic, but it has to leave them with a smile. It has to stick with them so they can’t forget, so they won’t ever forget. That’s a story. That’s what will put The Daily Sentinel on the map!”

It seemed that immediately after this final word, proclaimed with a boom, Blackney vanished. The typing ceased.

They noticed the hole in the ceiling first. It was large enough to climb through, and Human Resources peered down at them through it.

Blackney, or what was left of him, lay on the ground, smashed beneath a rock. It took some time to process. Bernard, the head photographer, snapped a few shots.

“Dibs!” Macaulay shouted. The others looked at him. “Dibs on the story. Dibs!”

“Nuts,” Patricia muttered.

Revisiting The Eternal Night Saga (Part 3)

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So, here we are, the moment of truth.

As I worked my way toward finishing Book 3, I found myself stuck. It seemed to me that too much time had elapsed for there to be interest in Book 3 (except for a handful of very dedicated fans) when you couldn’t even get a copy of Book 1 easily. It bothered me.

Also, to motivate me, my wife suggested I serialize Book 3 as I wrote it. I like writing on a schedule, in small chunks, for an audience, no matter how small. But the same problem arose–who would want to jump in at Book 3?

The obvious answer, of course, was to serialize the whole series. It just took some time for me to warm up to it.

Here’s the plan. Starting soon (hey, it’s the holidays, I don’t know when I’ll get to it exactly), I’ll post a chapter or two a week. New readers can start at the beginning, and it’ll help me keep immersed in the world of Strin and Fred as I write Book 3.

But, even cooler, from my point of view, I’ll be adding footnotes» <–Did you click the link?

Stick around and try a few chapters of Book 1, Trouble on the Horizon.» If you’ve read it before, stop in for the behind the scenes snippets.

See you soon!

I’ll be adding cool additional information about influences, connections, revisions, etc. You can read the story normal, or you can stop at each of these sliding notes and peek behind the scenes. Cool? Well, I think so.Powered by Hackadelic Sliding Notes 1.6.5
Vaguely interesting fact: The title of each book is also the title of a pivotal chapter in the book.Powered by Hackadelic Sliding Notes 1.6.5

How the Eternal Night Saga began (Part 2)

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Man, I really need to get used to writing The Eternal Night Saga. It’s hard to break 10 years of calling it “Strin and Fred.”

(By the way, I dusted off my negligible Photoshop skills. See?)

Anyway….

I wanted to give a bit of background on the creation of the story I’ll begin posting here soon.

One day, long ago (say 1999), I was writing an email to a friend during the summer before my freshman year of college. At the end of the email, for no reason I can remember, I added a few paragraphs about these two guys named Strin and Fred, ending it with the always delightful “To Be Continued….”

And I did continue it, weekly, for the next year, sending it to about a half dozen of my friends via email. (You know, before Facebook and blogs and all that. Old school.)

What I ended up with before I quit was a novel, plus some. For my senior project, I dusted off the novel, gave it a substantial editing, and presented Trouble on the Horizon to the world. I published it with PublishAmerica in 2004.

The “plus some” eventually became the second book, The Remnant of Dreams, though it took me a good deal longer to hammer it out. Having thrown everything and the kitchen sink into the first book, I now had the responsibility to deepen the characters, shake up the plot, and move toward a coherent ending. I learned a lot while writing the second book, and though it’s more pensive than the first, I like it better.

And then there’s book 3. Not finished. Easily 50% longer than the earlier books when finished. Lots of crazy stuff happening. Etc.

Meanwhile, when I should have been writing book 3, other novel ideas kept presenting themselves. The Story Project. Squire. A Girl Called Snort. I got sidetracked.

Well, as I mentioned in the last post, I’m ready to return to my long abandoned project. I want to reintroduce audiences to Strin and Fred and the rest of the gang to the world.

It’s coming soon.

(One last post of rambling, next. Then the good stuff.)

Another World: 50 Snapshots now available!

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Another World: 50 Snapshots is my latest self-publication, with a twist.

This 160-page book collects all 50 flash fictions published on this website. It also includes new “DVD commentaries” on the behind-the-scenes ideas and influences that helped inspire the stories.

Here’s the twist – All profit goes to funding the 7th/8th grade DC Trip my students at St. John are taking this spring.

To order online, visit lulu.com. However, if you live locally (Kendallville, IN area), I can save you shipping.

If you really like one of the stories in the collection, drop me a line. I’d love to hear from my readers.