Monday, March 28, 2016

Progress and some actual news, if mundane

'A Song of Lesser Days' is done and updated and 'Thus it Began' is next, if ever I get that one finished, I'm working on releasing those two works along with 'Once a Thief' as a boxed set, so everything except the Foibles will be available as a collection.

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

There are legends and then there are legends...

I have revised 'Legends' finally, now it is 'A Song of Lesser Days,' maybe I can get everything revised before I become a legend?

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

A slight but thoroughly enjoyable detour

I got lost, but that's no reason not to enjoy the scenery, right?  I was two thirds of the way through 'Legends' when I picked up 'Over the Hills and Far Away' instead, this one may get done before the former, as I'm thoroughly enjoying rereading the little stories in the latter.  You know you are writing too much when you completely forget the plot of something you wrote two years ago!  If you haven't read it, it is a fun little book of ersatz fairy tales and it's free; it is probably my most overlooked work but it may also be one of my favorites.

Sunday, March 6, 2016

On running mad with the esteemed Miss Austen with commentary by G.K. Chesterton!

I just ran across this introduction to Jane Austen's 'Love and Friendship,' by G.K. Chesterton, what a gem!  Anything written by Chesterton on Austen is certainly worth the read!  I also had time to peruse the story itself, apparently written when the esteemed lady was only 17.  While her spelling is atrocious, her wit and ability to entertain, satirize, and craft a story are down right scary.  She is truly the marvel Chesterton claims her to be.  No wonder I've been so dissatisfied with all the 'sequels,' for it is not the story we love so much as the way it is told.  If she can write like this at 17, few are the writers who can match her!  She's truly 'the Bard' of the drawing room.

And a word of warning, this story is not to be taken seriously, it is a satirical romp making fun of the romances of the day, and I have rarely enjoyed anything so much.  Perhaps it foreshadows Northanger Abbey, but it makes even that gothic satire look respectable.  Too bad she isn't still around, think what she could do with werewolf novels!  'Run mad as often as you chuse, but do not faint!'