2026 SPRING NEWSLETTER
Author Notes
Authors are an interesting bunch. When learning about the ins and outs of the art, I found that each writer did their research differently. In one such case, I recall a story about an author whose office was in his basement. The place looked like something straight out of a museum. There was at least one cluttered desk complete with a computer, keyboard, mouse, and monitor. There were shelves with labeled storage bins. Inside the bins were stacks of manila folders containing newspaper and magazine clippings, pages taken from books, pictures, and more. Bookcases overflowed with novels and reference materials. Stacks of books found a home off to the sides.
I had notebooks everywhere--13 of them--and wrote in whichever one was handy. Alternatively, if a notebook was not handy, I either stored notes on my cellphone or on my computer in a Text or Word file. The writing bug started over twenty years ago and has only intensified in recent years. With notes scattered all over the place, there was no way my aging brain could keep up with it all.
A month ago, I knew it was time to consolidate and chose to stow all pertinent notes into a single Word file. Weeks later, my "Author Notes" file surpassed 180 pages. It contains a Table of Contents, adding to the ease of finding notes, as does the search feature within Word. What took several minutes now takes a few seconds.
In the end, the consolidation effort permitted me to rewrite some notes while also getting reacquainted with everything I have ever written--all of the notes, all of the ideas, everything. Another ancillary benefit of the consolidation is that I have a clearer picture of the order of priority for my projects and tasks.
As Albert Einstein once said, “Organized people are just too lazy to go looking for what they want.”
The Forbidden Zone Update
Each novel in the series contains at least one notable person, place, or thing. In Cataclysm, there were two: the Amityville House and Theodore Roosevelt. In Elimination, we saw Jack the Ripper brutally murder two women during his canonical murder spree in Whitechapel. In Bloodshed, a Test of Mettle takes place in the Grand Canyon.
The Forbidden Zone is an area of the Grand Canyon with tons of legends, folklore, and mystery. There are mixed views about why the government guards and monitors specific regions of the Grand Canyon, known as the Forbidden Zone. There are also questions about who oversees this activity.
One of the tales, a hoax really, occurred in 1909, when a salesman by the name of Joe Mulhattan convinced the Arizona Gazette to publish a story about a man named G.E. Kincaid, who traveled from Idaho to Arizona. Along the Colorado River, he visits a cave containing Egyptian mummies and relics, a visit later confirmed by Smithsonian employee S.A. Jordan. If you have read any of my books or stories, you know I have a penchant for taking real historical facts and figures, then tossing in a demon or two for a Test of Mettle story to create something unique. Days of research went into writing this story, which has now become the longest Test of Mettle to date. The first draft is 92 pages/24K words long, 30 pages longer than the previous longest Test of Mettle story.
Bloodshed Update
The first draft of the third novel in the 11:34 series is nearing completion. As of this newsletter, it stands at 236 pages/62K words. I am in the process of writing the third act, which, like Elimination, will end in a cliffhanger. The fourth novel, Revelation, will start immediately where the story ended. The first draft is expected to be completed in the next couple of months. Multiple rounds of editing will follow so that the book is as error-free as possible.
It is too early to provide a release date at this time. So stay tuned for future updates.
Book Covers
I reached out to my graphic artist, who is located in the UK, to create three new book covers. They will be used for Revelation (11:34, book 4), Revenge (11:34, book 5), and Deathsword (standalone epic).
Standalone Novel: Deathsword
Over twenty years ago, Deathsword was the first novel I ever wrote before I learned the craft of writing. The idea behind this was two-fold. First, I figured that if I took up writing, I could compare my "educated" self with the rough-and-tumble approach. It allowed me to evaluate the progress in my writing skills. And let me tell you, Deathsword is extremely difficult to read. When I crack it open, I usually quit after less than ten pages. While I still find the story compelling, I can't say the same about the writing itself. The second reason was a little sweeter. It was a gift to my future self. A "free" book to publish, should I wish to go forward with the project. I have tons of notes, which are now consolidated, a timeline, and an outline of this fantasy epic.
Here is an early blurb for Deathsword:
All is right and peaceful in the world of Colossus until Death’s daughter, the banshee—a soul-eater, arrives. The banshee quickly marshals a legion of harpies to rain death and destruction upon her new home. The Knights of Kamelot, the best soldiers on the planet, have never faced such a nemesis before.
Diadin, a knight, loses his soul to the banshee and begins her work, starting with forging a hell-borne weapon called Deathsword, imbued by a powerful demon that gifts the bonded holder of the sword with special powers in return for mortal blood.
As the world falls into chaos, it is up to the Knights of Kamelot to set things right and destroy the banshee before she brings an end to their world.
Standalone Novellas
I have a few stories that are ripe for novella territory. The first is Angel's Wings. After going to school for writing, I practiced the craft by writing many short stories, some of which were submitted to writing contests, such as Reader's Digest and The Writer.
Angel's Wings is a 2,000-word story that sees a growing friendship between Paul, a homeless man, and Angel, a Hispanic owner of a bakery in California. The once-successful businessman has his life turned upside down when his wife divorces him, runs off with his best friend, and takes his business elsewhere in the country. While Paul is busy putting the pieces of his shattered life back together, he receives more bad news. Paul is diagnosed with an aggressive form of cancer. Unemployed, terminally ill, and broke, Paul finds himself on the street. When things were at their bleakest, Paul finds an angel.
The Father Tom Stories are a collection of flash, feel-good stories I wrote years ago to share with my congregation. A priest named Tom, who God has seemingly touched with the ability to perform small miracles, finds himself confronted by the forces of darkness wherever his normal travels take him, even on a day at the park with his family or walking past a notorious biker bar to a conference.
Standalone Novel: Karma
I will focus on finishing Karma after Bloodshed is ready for publication.
