I haven't even finished the first draft for Shell Shock yet, but I've already got the cover, which I thought I'd share with you:
As you can see from the covers, Shell Shock is a sequel to my book Seven Stones. It's unmistakable by the design, though there is no overt reference to it.
There is one more yet to come, though I have yet to come up with a name. I'll have to try real hard to have it as two words, both starting with an "S", as I have with my first two. Also, I'll try to have an "O" in the second word somewhere in the middle so my cover creator can place something inside it as she has on Seven Stones and Shell Shock.
My cover designer is the wonderful Elizabeth Mackey, by the way. You can see more of her work here:
Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adventure. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 2, 2016
Monday, August 31, 2015
My Novel, Seven Stones Available (Sort Of)
My new novel, Seven Stones, is now available for pre-order
for Kindle.
So what’s it all about and why should you care? Because I’ve made a very
conscious decision to bring you action from the get go while providing a
portrait of life a century ago. The story begins a year before the start of
World War I, touching upon many of the events and people of the day. It will
take you to a Louisiana plantation where the owner still believes he has the
right to own his workers, not only in life but also in death. The main
character, Doug Slattery, encounters séances and acquaintances of Harry
Houdini. Sister ships Mauretania and Lusitania cross The Atlantic with speed
and in style, while The Trans Siberian Railway brings prisoners East to
populate a bleak and ungiving land, where Joseph Stalin sits in exile. The
South Pole has just been reached, and in the process, evidence is found in The
Antarctic of a time when all the continents were united in a single
Urcontinent. Physician Max Planck and novelist Jack London are using science to
reinterpret the world in which they live. And through it all, the status quo is
being threatened by those who would hurl bombs in order to advance their
agenda. The old world is dying. What will survive, and what will come from the
ashes? And what happens when mankind plays with powers beyond its reckoning?
Labels:
Action,
adventure,
Harry Houdini,
Historical,
horror,
Jack London,
Magic,
Max,
New Novel,
New Release,
Pangea,
Planck,
RMS Lusitania.Joseph Stalin,
RMS Mauretania,
Shackleton,
supernatural,
Urcontinent,
World War I
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Chapter 21 From Seven Stones
Seven Stones will be available in September. Here's a little sampling:
Chapter 21
November 13, 1913 London
Doug awoke in his hotel room, staring up this time not
at Evangeline Warren but Ashavan. It hardly made any difference to him, as the
void remained with him. He was senseless to the world, detached from it in the
way that Evangeline had shown him that it was detached from him. But Ashavan
removed a jewel from his coat pocket. It was the same stone he had always had,
but it seemed to shine slightly brighter. And in the moment he exposed Doug to
it, to a faintly perceptible degree his condition improved. While his conscious
mind was still detached from the world, his senses began to make contact with
the outside again, recording what was detected even if there was no mind to
interpret the information.
Ashavan was attempting to use his senses to bridge the
gap, now, speaking softly in his deep resonant voice in order to tease out some
kind of response from the seemingly comatose man lying on the bed in front of
him.
“You have stared into the darkness, Douglas Slattery,
and it has overwhelmed you. You have, as Freidrich Nietzche said, stared into
the abyss, and the abyss has stared back into you.”
Doug could sense somewhat that Ashavan was cradling
him on his lap as a father might comfort a son who is ill. And like a father,
he knew he was helpless to do anything for him other than give encouragement.
“You have experienced the nothingness. But what would
happen, Doug, if while gazing into the emptiness we did not lose faith? What
if, while traveling in the darkness that it so happened that we were the light we needed? The abyss
exists, there is no denying, but so do we. That also is undisputable. We may be
tiny, but as Tennyson said, ‘what we are, we are.’ It is perhaps the era we are
now living in that has forgotten this. We are the first generation to have left
the land and gone to live in cities of man’s creation, and so we have forgotten
that we are still a part of all creation. Science has caused us to look at our
world as outside observers, we see everything as scientific phenomena, but we
have forgotten ‘self’.
He spoke on, in some way hoping the words might bridge
the gap between himself and Doug. “I met a man aboard the ship we were on, a
wonderfully intelligent physicist, Max Planck. One seldom gets the opportunity
to come across a mind like his, even for one as well travelled as I. He told me
that science cannot solve the ultimate mystery of nature, and that is because
we are part of the mystery we are trying to solve.”
Ashavan looked down at Doug, hoping for signs of some
kind of recognition. “Don’t you see, Doug, in the final analysis, it is up to
you. And I. The abyss, the nothingness, it’s an empty stage for us to perform
upon, an empty page waiting for you to write your story, a silence awaiting a
song. Nothing doesn’t matter. You do, we all do. And it’s up to you, there is
nothing that nothing can do to you. It is your choice to come back. You can be
part of the nothing if you wish. But it is a choice. It is your story, Doug,
you who write it.”
There was no reply to come from Doug’s lips, no hint
of recognition in his eyes. So Ashavan was absolutely shocked to feel a hand
reach for his, as if it were a blind man’s. Ashavan grabbed it, and felt
fingers working in concert to form around his own.
He had brought Doug back from the abyss.
Thursday, April 16, 2015
Another Snippet From My New Novel, 7 Stones
A little sample from my forthcoming novel, 7 Stones. I'll try my hardest have it out in fall:
Ashavan was attempting to use his senses to bridge the gap,
now, speaking softly in his deep resonant voice in order to tease out some kind
of response from the seemingly comatose man lying on the bed in front of him.
“You have stared into the darkness, Douglas Slattery, and it
has overwhelmed you. You have, as Freidrich Nietzche said, stared into the
abyss, and the abyss has stared back into you. But what would happen, Doug, if
while gazing into the emptiness we did not lose faith? What if, while traveling
in the darkness that it so happened that we
were the light we needed? The abyss exists, there is no denying, but so do we.
That also is indisputable. We may be tiny, but as Tennyson said, ‘what we are,
we are.’ It is perhaps the era we are now living in that has forgotten this. We
are the first generation to have left the land and gone to live in cities of
man’s creation, and so we have forgotten that we are still a part of all
creation. Science has caused us to look at the world as outside observers, we
see everything as scientific phenomena, but we have forgotten ‘self’.
He spoke on, in some way hoping the words might bridge the
gap between himself and Doug. “I met a man aboard the ship we were on, a
wonderfully intelligent physicist, Max Planck. One seldom gets the opportunity
to come across a mind like his, even for one as well travelled as I. He told me
that science cannot solve the ultimate mystery of nature, and that is because
we are part of the mystery we are trying to solve.”
Ashavan looked down at Doug, hoping for signs of some kind
of recognition. “Don’t you see, Doug, in the final analysis, it is up to you.
And I. The abyss, the nothingness, it’s an empty stage for us to perform upon,
an blank page waiting for you to write your story on it, a silence awaiting a
song. Nothing doesn’t matter. You do, we all do. And it’s up to you, there is
nothing that nothing can do to you. It is your choice to come back. You can be
part of the nothing if you wish. But it is a choice. It is your story, Doug,
you who write it.”
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