Tags
The Legend of Four Winds Butte – Part 2
31 Monday Oct 2022
Posted Mystery Stories, Short Story
in≈ Comments Off on The Legend of Four Winds Butte – Part 2
31 Monday Oct 2022
Posted Mystery Stories, Short Story
in≈ Comments Off on The Legend of Four Winds Butte – Part 2
Tags
19 Wednesday Oct 2022
Posted Blogging, Mystery Stories
in≈ Comments Off on The Legend of Four Winds Butte
Tags
Just in time for Halloween. Part 1 of a short story about an ancient curse in the Southwest, and a budding anthropologist who ignores the warnings.
The Legend of Four Winds Butte
Part 2 Conclusion on October 31
02 Saturday Apr 2022
Posted BWG Roundtable Magazine
in≈ Comments Off on Spring Issue of Roundtable Magazine
The 2022 Spring Issue of Roundtable Magazine, a publication of the Bethlehem Writers Group, is now available online.
I have the honor to be this season’s featured author with, “Desert Buzz”, a short story about a New Englander’s first Southern Nevada spring that may lead to a budding romance.
This season’s theme, Spring Abuzz, offers featured poem, “Hysteranthous”, by Maggie Kennedy. We also have short stories from William Sharon and Richard L. Shelby, poems by Alexander Zera and Christopher Clauss, Literary Learnings from Carol L. Wright, and the ever-popular writing tips from Betty Wryte-Goode.
Enjoy.
26 Saturday Mar 2022
Posted Mystery Stories, Short Story Contest
in≈ Comments Off on Revised Deadline for “Element of Mystery” Short Story Contest – April 30, 2022
31 Tuesday Jul 2018
Posted On Writing
in≈ Comments Off on Little Big Stories
Tags
Author Spotlight, Bethlehem Writers Group, Science Fiction, Short Stories, Writing, Writing Short Stories
Toa Heftiba – via @unsplash
This month, I’m the featured author in the Author’s Roundtable, an online quarterly magazine of short stories for the Bethlehem Writers Group (BWG). Based on a theme that changes with every issue, this quarter is ‘Written in the Stars’.
*****
A shell of its former glory, NASA in the near future discovers what Planet Nine really is, and has to convince a skeptical director who doesn’t understand the basics of our solar system.
Illustration Caltech/R. Hurt – via NatGeo Education Blog
“What’s this all about,” Trevor Stanhope asked his Associate Administrator.
The click of Helen Martinez’s low-heeled shoes kept cadence to Stanhope’s brisk stride as they hurried along on the polished floors of NASA’s subterranean levels. “The note mentioned recent information that needs your immediate attention,” she said.
Six months since Stanhope’s appointment as NASA’s Administrator, President Barbara Preston specifically asked him to shake things up by reining-in expensive projects and the Brainiacs who were too busy looking for ET. “Bring in some solid space science we can use while getting the Mars mission off the ground, like updated satellite reconnaissance and better asteroid killers,” she’d told him.
“Did they send a synopsis, so I can understand what they’re saying when they start throwing those pseudo-scientific terms and acronyms around?” he asked.
“All I got was something to do with all the increased meteorite activity, asteroid close calls, and TNO’s . . . Trans Neptunian Objects.”
“Trans-nep-toonia objects . . .” Stanhope chuckled. “Sounds like that Christmas rock orchestra that pops up every holiday.” A lawyer by education, and six-term, conservative US Congressman before President Preston handed him this job, Stanhope’s grasp of science was limited to high school chemistry. Where did they come up with these names?
*****
Which leads me to confessing how I got into little big stories in the first place.
30 Sunday Apr 2017
Posted On Writing
inIf you’re a writer, especially someone jumping into it as a newbie, eventually you find others who share the same experience. Why? Well – it gets a little lonely in the writing cave. The one thing that drives us to others are strong messages that our work needs a second, third, maybe more set of eyes.
I participate in several writer communities. From this network of fellow word smiths, I tested fresh pages of new work to a select few I’d grown comfortable with (by that, I mean established a degree of trust that I’d get a true, objective opinion). I didn’t want to fall into that novice pothole by cringing from a no-holds-barred review, skulking back to my cave with ‘they don’t get my stuff’. Kind of the point isn’t it? Unless I planned to write stories, then bury them in a time capsule for aliens to find ten-thousand years from now, I needed feedback redolent of what the public might think.
As I built trust with others, they asked for reciprocation of services rendered by asking me to read their stuff. I initially cringed with heavy doubt I was qualified to rate someone else’s stuff. It sent me to the archives of my groaning file of writer research for how to do a proper critique. Like everything else in this wacky art form we drudge through, how-to advice in writertopia is as varied as insect species on earth. I chose a reviewing format in the same manner I use when purchasing new appliances, or looking for a plumber. Which appliance (or plumber) is on most every one’s recommended list? In this case, what pearls of reviewing wisdom floated to the top?
Reflections and Delusions
An exploration of writing and reading
Searching for Light in the Darkness
Tales From an Untethered Mind
Irreverence's Glittering New Low!
Book Reviewer and Blogger
One writer's experiences, and battles with words
Aspiring Writers Unite! Learn from my mistakes (and advice from the experts)
Dare to Defy the Unknown
the literary asylum
Seeds planted by Sienna Mae Heath
I didn't travel 10,000 miles across the globe to not make any friends
Smile! You’re at the best WordPress.com site ever