Canon Shots

Laurie’s Got a New Book Out!

Laurie Sutton, good friend and frequent commenter here at the Face has a new book on the shelves!  It’s entitled Sword of the Dragon and it’s a YA story about Wonder Woman. 

Sword of the Dragon

Laurie’s a veteran comic-book writer and editor.  She’s done DC, she’s done Marvel and there’s nothing she doesn’t know about superheroes (about Star-Trek, too – but that’s another story).  Our paths first crossed when Bob and I had the bright idea to create a Thieves’ World graphic novel.  Bob was going to be the writer/scriptor, we lured Tim Sale  over from the MythAdventures graphic project, and Laurie came on board as our editor.

I had no official role, largely because comics and I weren’t even on the same planet.  I’d read a few Fantastic Four comics back in college, but…well, you know what they say about the 60s: if you can remember, then you weren’t there; I don’t remember a whole lot about the Fantastic Four.  Then Bob’s notoriously short attention-span for details came into play and I was suddenly the scriptor and Laurie had the unenviable task of teaching me enough about comics so I could write one.

She’s a great teacher and storyteller.  She’s told me that it’s a vintage Wonder Woman tale set in and around Stonehenge with Morgan leFay as the villain.  (And it’s got the invisible plane!)

Personally, I’m going to buy two copies.  A paper copy for me…so she can autograph it for me on our way to DragonCon at the end of the month….and a hardcover to donate to the Leesburg library…because with the budget cuts they’ve been enduring this year, they’re not buying many books.

Weekend thoughts…

Statistically, any day could be a bad news day: the phone rings and a few seconds later your life’s crossed a threshold from which there’s no going back.  And, statistically, the older you get and the older the people around you get, the better the odds are that any particular call will be that call.

Lately, by which I mean since Bob died in 2008, it seems I’ve been getting a couple every month and I almost got one today.

The phone rang about 5:30, which was a little unusual in and of itself – my usual crop of politicians, solicitors, and misguided debt collectors only call at dinner time during the week; on weekends they tend to call around eight in the morning.  It was my mom.  She sounded fine—and sometimes she sounds weary—but she told me I probably should sit down.  And I did, though it was more like I contracted into the nearest chair.  She hastened to tell me that she was, indeed, fine but that she’d been in a car accident.

Mom and Dad live in a very nice community just off US Highway 441 in Tavares.  When they moved there in 1980, you could practically go bowling each day out on Highway 441, but that’s changed now.  441 is six lanes now and while just about every place lays claim to the worst drivers in the country, I think Lake County might actually have them.  When Jane and CJ came to visit, they watched as the driver at the next gas pump, dragged himself out of the driver’s seat and down the length of his car, clearly a stroke victim, completely paralyzed on one side—with all that that means for depth perception and peripheral vision.  Jane and CJ were agog, but I scarcely blinked—that’s an ordinary sight on Highway 441.

It’s the kind of road that drives you crazy and brings out the worst in every driver – including me and, today, apparently, including my mom.  She was trying to make a left, which means crossing the three southbound lanes (never mind that they’re actually going due east), holing up in the median cut, then merging into the northbound lanes (which are going due west…love driving that road at sunset).  And, somehow, she overlooked a semi in the outside lane and merged into its second axle – the rear wheels of the cab.

Somehow, she got the car back onto the median (from which I infer that it wasn’t so badly crumpled that its tires were no longer in contact with the ground).

And she’s not hurt.  Embarrassed, but not hurt.

And I’m blogging rather than doing any of a great number of things that I’m really not looking forward to at all.

But a semi–   The mind boggles, and cringes.  I don’t think I’m going to sleep well tonight.

All in all, I’d rather have had a replay of last weekend’s crisis.  That was when we lost Jane’s email archive.  Seems she’d been archiving all her email (and all the Closed Circle email!) on the server and in the midst of trying to tamp down Carolyn’s spam torrent, I missed the warning messages (assuming there were warning messages) that her archive had grown larger than its server-space.  She sent me this very plaintive message—did I have any idea why she couldn’t access her email archive?

I didn’t…until I looked at the server directories, then I did a swift OMG, ‘cause her account was gone, gone, gone.  Fortunately, I had access to a full system backup of everything on our server.  Once I got it downloaded, I started picking it apart.  Ultimately, I found the missing archives and restored them (along with her email account which now has infinite storage!) 

But it took a while and while I was working I apparently forgot to move because when I finally stood up I had a stabbing pain above my left hip.  Ibuprofen didn’t touch it and I thought I’d done something not only stupid but serious.  It’s still stupid, but it’s not serious: I managed to pull a groin muscle while sitting!  For several days, I asked myself, How did I do that? all while grumbling to myself that it wasn’t really getting better.  On Wednesday it dawned on me (one of those “dawn broke over the universe” moments) that the problem was my computer chair—my beloved Balans chair in which I’ve been kneeling for nearly thirty years.

Balans

I don’t know whether the fault lies with the chair or with my body (a bit of both, I suspect), but I rolled the Balans aside and sat myself down in a spare dining-room chair.  The dining-room chair brought instant misery to my back, but my groin stopped hurting immediately.  So I went on a quest for a new computer chair.  I guess I’m glad that there are so many more choices now, but I lost hours figuring out what all the adjectives meant.  After sitting in every chair at the local Office Depot, I concluded that I wanted (needed?) a mid-back chair with forward-tilt adjustment and a waterfall seat (waterfall seat???  Who knew???)  None of the available local chairs worked for me, so I’ve ordered one from Amazon.  It had gotten as far as Jacksonville by midnight last night and should be here, ready to assemble, on Monday.

In the meantime—and for the first time in a long, long time—I’m having ration my at-the-computer time, which meant I didn’t get to alert everyone to the shout-out that Closed Circle got on Tele-Reads last Thursday.  It’s an interesting article, worth reading even without Closed Circle.  We’ve moved into the next round of the publishing Kerfluffle – now an agent has their authors’ backlists and given them exclusively to Amazon.  I’ll have more thoughts to share about this…once I’ve assembled the new chair…

We got a nice plug yesterday…

I’ve been wrestling with some chronic vision issues caused by living in a part of the country that is too bright for my Britain-based genes so I missed this nice mention of Closed Circle over at the Dear Author blog

Their tag line includes the dreaded word “romance,” but please don’t let that stop you from delving deeply into their archives.  Genre boundaries are less meaningful than ever (less ghetto, more sprawl) and the “J”s have great insights when it comes to the evolution (devolution???) of traditional publishing

I don’t think this is a compliment….

I succumbed to the latest fad and fed the first two chapters of “Behind Time” to the I Write Like site.

It promptly generated this….  (In any other genre, I’d know it wasn’t a compliment, but maybe…in fantasy…

Well…I can hope.

I write like
H. P. Lovecraft

I Write Like by Mémoires, Mac journal software. Analyze your writing!

The Wooden Sword is live!

With Jane’s help, I’ve added The Wooden Sword to our Closed Circle inventory.

As with most things on the Internet, adding inventory isn’t really difficult, it’s just fussy…very fussy.  HTML and its many relatives have zero tolerance for spelling and syntax errors, but I think the product is on the shelves.  Good descriptions will have to wait until tomorrow (or later today, as the case may be).

Right now Dart and Berika’s story is available on my fantasy page here and on the full-inventory page here

There’s a free sample that contains the first two chapters in .pdf, .epub, and .mobi format available here

Maybe by the weekend…

I touched up the Wooden Sword cover to make the title a bit easier to read and to add some depth to the sword’s hilt.WoodenSword_Cover_Final

I’d really hoped to have the book (and its sample) up on Closed Circle by now, but life intervened: more meetings with roofers in search of a way to passively drain the swimming pools that form on top of our buildings every time it rains, a pair of Habitat for Humanity dedications that carved larger chunks out of my schedule than I’d anticipated, and a stall iPhone download of one of Jane’s books.  (Usually Jane handles that sort of problem herself, but she and Carolyn had gone on a quest for mattresses and the purchaser-in-distress had been planning/hoping to have Jane’s books available for reading on a plane that was departing….oh, about five hours ago.

The good news is that I managed to send a working file her way, but I really need to write down the secret location where Jane stashes our stock!

Anyway, I’m off to Macon, GA tomorrow morning.  I promised Diane before she left that I’d come visit her every fifth Wednesday…and that’s tomorrow.  When we’re not conspiring and stitching with Roberta. we’ll be playing with zippers (inspired by this Etsy shop: Woolly Fabulous