Two Worlds

Sometimes I think we live in two worlds, and they’re remarkably different. Oh, I don’t even mean left and right in the US, though we should perhaps consider the left a third world (yes, you see what I did there) willfully blind and different from everyone else in the US.

But what the rest of the world thinks they know about the US is like a different world altogether. It’s not even lies precisely. I mean, of course, what they think they know is false and therefore lies. But “lies” doesn’t do the thing justice. It’s more like a complete architecture for a parallel universe, something like what I’d do if creating a parallel world, quite different from ours. “So, if this is different, that is different too.”

Some of it is built on the bizarre assumptions of our left, but then goes further.

Lately, some statistical outfit (sorry, I woke up feeling ill, and can’t remember which) has been doing comparisons between US states and other countries.

We saw the meltdown on twitter in real time when it was revealed Canada is poorer than Alabama. Dear Lord, that was bizarre.

Canadians (real ones, though, yes, also the usual scruff and ruff from third world countries, but I think we can discount those) ran around with their heads on fire, saying what they thought were truthful statements about us. And it was mind bogglingly bizarre. Stuff like “But at least we’re better educated than Alabama.” They could have picked another state, say, California, and have had a better chance of making that fly. But Alabama, though. Alabama, where you can pick Phds in Physics from the ground and bump into highly qualified engineers at any Walmart. Surely they know that NASA is in Alabama? Yes? No? Maybe? And yes, of course our education sucks, but as with everything else, when America catches a cold the rest of the world gets pneumonia. Their education is probably, person by person and measure by measure worse. (And no, don’t talk to me of tests. Most other countries not only spend the time teaching the test, but send their best for international tests. We send random kids.) And while our primary and increasingly secondary and occasionally tertiary education sucks, the US remains the greatest group of auto-didacts the world has ever known. Seriously. Not only are you tube channels on just about all serious disciplines massively successful and frequented increasingly by the young, but we get more non fiction books published on serious academic subjects and sold to the general public than anywhere in the world.

I remember when my poor brother started offering to send me books on world history that he’d just found and he thought it would be difficult to get here: they were all books I’d bought and read years ago, back when I did a lot more history reading than I do today. (I still do it, but I go through phases.) I mean, before Amazon we had History Book Clubs. For a while there, I was writing to pay my History Book Club bill.

But somehow they have this image of us fostered by our own movies that we live between TV and movie and mall, and maybe now game unit, without serious thought or deliberation.

The fact that political and serious debate blogs, equivalent in every way to the pre-revolutionary committees of correspondence have sprung up like weeds here but nowhere else in the world doesn’t dent this certainty.

They also, of course, told us that at lest they could get health care. I have run into this before, with Canadian friends who are utterly convinced if you have a horrible accident and don’t have insurance, the hospital will dump you on the street to fend for yourselves. This is ridiculous, since they are so close to us they should know better. And they avail themselves of our healthcare all the time, too.

Then there was the revelation that Great Britain is poorer, on average, than Kentucky. Not actually a surprise to anyone who has visited normal people in Europe or even (just) paid attention to movies that show the UK and professionals living in the UK. It is quite obvious their “comfortable middle aged professionals” which mind you this being television are probably pitched a little more “glitzy” than in reality live about like our struggling young couples.

But Great Britain, on Twitter, lost its collective mind. Things they said back included, of course that at least they don’t die by the way side for lack of medical care (WHAT, ACTUALLY?) and that they’re not likely to get shot while standing outside their house.

I’ve lived in 4 states in the US. I haven’t ever lived in a place where I’d get shot just standing outside my house. Yes, I know there are neighborhoods where that happens in the US, but I’d bet there are neighborhoods where that happens all over the world, because gun control does nothing to stop criminals acquiring illegal guns. But if you make it really difficult there will just be neighborhoods where you get knifed (hello, UK!) or beaten to death.

And then there’s the utter crazy cakes, where they’re convinced they live better than us on the material level, or that our poor people are all basically homeless. Or of course that ICE is randomly rounding up anyone who tans. The mind boggles.

Today the ex-archbishop of Canterbury, the same man who on occasion expressed doubts as to the existence of G-d or the rightness of Christianity apparently unaware this renders his position moot, claimed our political body here in the US is “demonic” and “possessed.”

And I’m sitting here, sincerely wondering what the heck could get into his head to say that. How it never occurs to him that if that were the case possibly the most religious Christian country left in the world would be packing churches 24/7 and praying prayers of deliverance.

Yes, I know that Europe has this weird mythology that Germany just suddenly out of the blue turned sour and went nuts and no one saw it, because they don’t want to realize what Nazi Germany was take to 11 ideas that all of them were playing with at the time. Instead they have the “Madman led them astray and they didn’t see it” theory, which is cute, but never happened, in the history of ever. That’s not how people work, that’s not how groups work, that’s not how nations work. Not unless you’re in a movie. In the real world it take a generation of serious intellectuals thinking increasingly anti-human and bizarrely evil thoughts and not being reproached, and being treated as though they make sense. And then “suddenly” once the crazy ideology has the bureaucracy, most of the citizens minds at the level of “of course” and gets forceful leadership, yep, you start putting people in ovens. But for a generation you’ve been talking about culling the population for the good of society.

Of course, Europe doesn’t want to face that, because it’s them (and some of our crazier left) making with those ideas. And looking in the mirror and seeing a monster is hard.

But still. We’re here. We’re on the web and available 24/7. We actually talk a lot about how things are in our corner of the world. And if you look on Twitter you can see how few of the crazy doomers are actually American. We are probably the most open nation in the world in terms of having our every day citizens on line running their mouths.

I won’t say we don’t have some evil bastages. Sometimes I identify as one. But seriously? demonic? Possessed? Or in any way comparable to Nazi Germany?

The only way their bubble reality holds is the way the left’s holds. They believe “authorized sources” only, i.e. those who agree with them, and write off normal people talking about their lives and how they are.

It is actually a fascinating lesson in how old habits linger in the rest of the world, old ideas and how the inability to reorient is destroying them.

All we can do is free ourselves, and hope they follow. But some days I despair of them, even if we do turn this ship around.

A Small Pause For Self Promo

*Real post is coming. I slept very badly. One of those nights where I fought my bed and the bed won. Inexplicably I have a small cut between my eyes. My cats don’t sleep in the room, and my nails are short. It’s bizarre. There is this head cannon that someone comes and beats me in the night, as I will have inexplicable cuts and bruises. Anyway, real post in an hour or so, but I should do this, since Witch’s Daughter is on pre order and comes out on the 23rd. AS USUAL ALL LINKS HAVE MY ASSOCIATE’S ACCOUNT AND GIVE ME A SMALL TIP AT NO EXTRA COST TO YOU IF YOU BUY THROUGH THEM. – SAH*

Witch’s Daughter, coming out on Thursday, up for pre-order

(This version is not copy-edited. It’s out at the copyeditor, and I hope to upload the clean version tomorrow.)

Witch’s Daughter

by Sarah A. Hoyt

The Letter

It has often been said that dead men don’t talk. In Avalon, this isn’t necessarily true. Dead men can talk if a reasonably talented necromancer is willing to risk the death penalty for reanimating a corpse.

But Michael had never heard of a dead man who wrote letters.

The letter lay on the breakfast table, next to the only setting on it, on a silver salve between the spoon and the porcelain creamer.

Michael Ainsling, youngest son of the late Duke of Darkwater and brother of the current titular, eyed it suspiciously, while he took his seat. His eyes widened slightly at the name of the sender, then he frowned at his own name in the space reserved for the recipient.

He hadn’t slept well.  Dark rings marked the pale skin beneath the dark green eyes he shared with all his male relatives.

A well grown boy at the age when he resented being called such, Michael had that look boys have when they’ve achieved adult height but not yet filled in. He’d been the quiet half of fraternal twins, his sister Caroline being the garrulous and outgoing half. Then Caroline had been sent to an academy for young ladies, where she was presumably still garrulous but far away from Michael, so that Michael had to do his own talking and endure social interaction.

It had been thought – then – that Michael’s recent experiences had left him too frail to attend Cambridge. Michael frowned with distaste at the thought, as he folded and refolded his napkin. He did not believe he was frail. Nor did he understand why Seraphim had thought it better to leave Michael here on the deserted estate. With Caroline gone, Seraphim — now the tenth Duke of Darkwater and the prince consort of the Princess Royal — spending most of his time in London, and Mama having gone  adventuring no one knew where, Michael’s was the only place setting at the table designed to accommodate twenty.

Most of the days he swallowed tea and toast and rushed off to work in his workshop. Today… He glared at the letter by his cup. Like it or not, he would have to face this problem.  What could it mean?

He realized that the footman who’d discreetly followed him into the dining room still hovered near his chair. “You may go, Burket,” he said, without taking his eyes off the letter.

“Will you need anything else, Lord Michael?” the man asked and made a broad gesture as though encompassing the breakfast spread clustered around Michael’s place setting: fried kidneys and some sort of pie, and toast and butter and something else that looked suspiciously like fish cakes.

Michael didn’t sigh. “No, thank you, Burket. I have everything I need.”

Truly he wanted the man gone so Michael could look at the letter at leisure. The sender’s name was Tristram Blakley, and surely there couldn’t be more than one of those. The writing and the paper both looked fresh, as though someone had dashed off the note just this morning.

But Tristram Blakley had been dead for sixteen years. Michael had studied him among the great inventors of his time, the man who had created the carpetship liners that crossed the air between Britain and the Americas and took the upper classes of Avalon on pleasure cruises the world over. He remembered M ama telling him, once, that she’d known Tristram in youth, that he was a lot like Michael himself, always dreaming up new magical machines, but how he’d died young and how sad it was.

“Beg your pardon, Milord,” Burket said, which was when Michael realized the man had leaned over to pour him tea, and had almost poured it on Michael’s lap as Michael lifted his head.

“Thank you,” Michael said. “But you don’t have to pour my tea.”

Only now the man was buttering Michael’s toast and setting it on a plate, and smiling enticingly at Michael while nodding at the toast as though, for all the world, Michael were a toddler in need of being tempted to his food. “I know, milord, but you haven’t been eating, and what are we to tell his grace, should he ask? And he does ask, you know. ”

Michael picked up the toast  with what he knew was ill-grace, and took a bite, while still frowning at the letter. He could well believe that Seraphim worried about his eating and his health and everything else. And that was nothing to what Gabriel— his older half-brother, once Seraphim’s valet and now the king of fairyland— would be. Those two had always mistaken  themselves for Michael and Caroline’s parents. Michael was sure someone in the household was in Gabriel’s pay and sent him regular reports. It was a damnable intrusion.

When you have two older brothers who are far more powerful than you, and determined to protect, cosset and annoy you within an inch of your life, sometimes all you can do is play along. But Michael wished they’d let him read his letter in peace.

He took another bite, gulped down the tea, which was still hot and made his tongue sting, and then took another bite of toast, doing his best to simulate appetite he didn’t feel.

He had spent a restless and turmoil- filled night, dreaming of fairyland and his recent captivity in it, and it was all he could do not to allow a long shudder to go through him at the confused and patchy memory of that dream. That was the problem, too. In dream and memory fairyland was never anything clear and solid, anything you could rebel against and resent. It was a foggy, threatening recollection, in which places and people changed shape and essence, and in which pain and worse happened to you without warning.

“That is better, Milord,” Burket said, in the sort of kind, patronizing tone that made Michael wish they hadn’t forbidden duels and that it weren’t frowned upon to duel one’s social inferiors.

“Would you fancy a kidney? Perhaps a fish cake?” At Michael’s headshake, Burket stepped back, but didn’t leave, as Michael expected. Instead, he cleared his throat and looked towards the entrance door to the room, set next to the window that looked out over the gardens.

There was movement, and then two women and a man came in, all of them smiling widely, but all of them looking just the slightest bit embarrassed, as though they were doing something they shouldn’t be doing. The women were Mrs. Hooper, the housekeeper, starched and stiff in her black dress with its immaculate white collar, Mrs. Aiken, the cook, and the man was Dyer, the Butler.

What on Earth could be the matter?

Before Michael could even think to ask, Mrs. Hooper advanced, curtseyed, advanced again, curtseyed again, then beamed at him, again, as if he were an infant in the nursery, and spoke, “Lord Michael, since today is your seventeenth birthday, we thought it only fair…” She stopped and sniffled, as though she were fighting strong emotion, though Michael had no idea what that could possibly be. “That is, last summer, Milord, we thought you lost, and we wish you to believe we all hold you in the greatest affection, and therefore…” She blushed, which gave Michael all he could not to let his jaw drop in astonishment. Mrs. Hooper had never seemed fully human, much less capable of embarrassment. “Therefore we got you this gift, from everyone on the estate, to commemorate your seventeenth birthday Milord.”

She dropped a parcel wrapped in silver paper  and neatly tied with a silk ribbon, upon the table, just north of the letter from the dead man, then beat a hasty retreat.

Michael’s turn to blush, and to fumble with the paper. And then he had the devil’s own time concealing the expression of astonishment on his face, and overlaying it with gratification. “Oh, thank you,” he said, staring at the tiny gold box with the miniature scene of Zeus in judgment worked painted upon the porcelain lid. A snuff box? Why in heaven’s name did they think he’d take snuff? Even Seraphim didn’t. Snuff was, by and large, a thing of their father’s generation.

But he also understood, immediately, how expensive such a thing was, and how much of a sacrifice it had been to the servants to contribute to it. That colored his voice and his expression, as he stood and said, “I am not good at flowery speeches, but—” He lifted the box and looked it over.  “I am most gratified at your kind thought. Thank you. I thank you most heartily.”

The four of them curtseyed or  bowed according to their different sexes, looking gratified, and left.

Which is when Michael opened the letter from the dead man.

Escaping The Tower

The problem with a wicked stepmother, Miss Albinia Blakley thought, as she stood in front of the mirror, wearing William’s clothes, and tucking her abundance of red hair into a hat rakishly set on her red curls, was when the wicked stepmother was in fact your real mama.

It was all very well, after all, for Miss Albinia’s brothers – who always called her Al – because Mama was just the woman who had married Papa when William, the youngest, was three, and was in fact no blood relation to them. So they had nothing to be either sorry or worried for. It wasn’t their mama who mistreated them so.

Oh, it had been terrible for them, from what they’d said, to find that their kind and absent-minded father had married a forbidding and interfering woman who was a powerful witch to boot.

But at least all of them, even William, remembered Papa . Albinia didn’t. She didn’t remember anyone but Mama, the sole authority and arbiter in her fifteen years of life. Albinia locked the door to her room as she thought this, and sighed, because now she was on limited time.

Mama didn’t like her to lock her door, ever, and there was no point at all imagining that Mama  didn’t spell that lock, so that she knew the moment Al locked it. Mama spelled everything and kept track of everything Al did, which is what made this so devilishly difficult.

But spell or not, Albinia had to  lock the door, to at least delay Mama  and give her a chance to escape.

Because the thing was, Mama or no Mama, Al must leave and go find the boys.

She didn’t know if the boys had felt this way when Papa  left shortly after marrying Mama . She didn’t know because they never spoke to her of that time, before Al was born.

What she knew was that Papa  had disappeared shortly after marrying Mama, and had never returned. Presumed dead, everyone said.

And now the boys had disappeared. Al didn’t know where, but she knew two things. One, that Mama  had made them leave against their will. And two, that wherever they were they needed Al. And at any rate, Al needed them. She had been raised by them since she was in leading strings, and their presence had made life at Wulffen Downs less than torture. Even if Mama was her real mama, Al was not going to stick around and have the full benefit of Mama full attention for the duration.

Whatever the duration was. It had been miserable enough since William had left.

She scrunched under the bed to find the old sheets she had torn and tied together. They had to be old and discarded, because that was the only way to make sure they were no longer bespelled. The spells wore out and weren’t renewed when the sheets were ready for the rag bag. It had taken her six months to find some and to braid them into a passable rope, in the few minutes a day Mama left her alone.

Tying the sheet rope to the foot of the bed and throwing it out the window was the work of a moment. Al’s mind ticked through where Mama would be now.

Even if she were close by—say in her room, as she would be at this time—she had to come up the North staircase, down the hallway and up to the door. Right now, she would be on the top step.

Al got the magical kit, likewise assembled painstakingly over a year, from discarded bits and ends, so that she could be sure no one had bespelled or could track any part of it. The hard part of it had been buying the herbs, because she’d had to spend her allowance on them, in a shop at the other end of Wulffen Downs, so that Mama wouldn’t hear about her purchases. And she’d had to wrap them so they looked like candy.

It had earned her a sermon from Mama about spending her money on tooth-rotting sweets. But she had got the herbs necessary for enchantments.  She tied the pouch to a cord under her jacket, and then slipped the few silver coins left of her allowance into a pouch in her sleeve.

She could now hear Mama’s step in the hallway outside. Mama was clearing her throat, preparing to call her name.

Albinia pushed the window fully open, knelt on the parapet, and held on to the rope with both hands. She had remembered to put knots on the rope, and she set her feet on the first one, carefully, otherwise it would be like when she tried coming down from the cliff when she’d been bird watching with Edmund, and had got her hands burned, with the speed of sliding down the rope.

She clambered down the rope as, from above, came the sound of knocks and Mama calling “Open up. Open up immediately, young lady.”

She felt the little puff of magic as Mama opened the door with a spell, and she moved faster down the rope, because she had to be on the ground and running by the time Mama got to the window.

She had to go to her brothers. Samuel wouldn’t be able to look after them. He thought he could, but the others resented his attempts at invoking authority he didn’t have.  And Geoffrey needed someone to help him make himself understood when he started stuttering and Edmund would turn his clothes, his room and everything into an aviary, and Aaron would lose everything, including specimens of marsh plants, Jeremy and Joshua would argue about everything and end up with ruined canvases and paints from throwing them at each other, and William was likely to disappear into his music, and Samuel would just go all extremely disappointed at all this, which helped nothing.

Albinia looked down to see how far the ground was. She had measured the tower where her room was situated. She’d calculated the height to the window five different ways.

But as her stomach sank to her feet, she realized none of that mattered now. Because she was not suspended from her own home manor’s window, but from a window open on a façade of glass. In fact, it looked like she was hanging from a giant glass rectangle. Except that as she looked forward, she could see these were windows and that oddly dressed people inside the building were pointing at her and a woman was covering her mouth, but looked like she was screaming something.

Gone was the tower of the manor house on the cliff, overlooking the ocean and the familiar marshes. Mama. Mama and Mama’s magic!

She could feel as though an abrasion upon her magic, as if something in this strange place were trying to get through her magical shields.

Beneath her, there were flashes of moving things that she couldn’t understand and the sound of klaxons, superimposed on a low roar as of a million voices.

She had no idea where she was, dangling here, between Earth and sky, on her fragile ladder of sheets.

All she knew was that the ladder ended far short of the ground. More than the height of Al’s tower.

Far above, Mama leaned out the open window, and Mama’s voice called, “Albinia Blakley, you little idiot. Hang on. I shall pull you in.”

But if Al let Mama pull her in, she’d never ever get away again. Al let go of the ladder.

She let go before she could think. She let go knowing only that she couldn’t stand to go back in and explain herself to Mama. She let go knowing that she must get to her brothers, somehow, but not knowing how, except that she must get away from Mama and Mama’s magic, first.

She tumbled downwards, head over heels, wondering how it felt to hit the ground so far below. All her carefully constructed protective and helpful charms in candy wrapping rained down onto that distant pavement. They wouldn’t save her.

Would it hurt? Would she even feel it? She hoped she didn’t land on some innocent and kill them, even as air escaped her lungs and she couldn’t find the voice to scream.

Rescuing the Dead

Michael frowned at the letter. It was undoubtedly addressed to him, by a man who couldn’t possibly have known of his existence, unless he had read the announcement of Michael’s birth in some society newspaper once upon a time.

Swallowing tea and toast as fast as he could, Michael put the snuff box in his pocket and retreated to his workshop.

Properly speaking, he had two workshops: one in the house, a room that had taken his father a substantial portion of the family fortune to build for his ingenious and precocious son, and the other deep in the garden, where Michael assembled and tested those experiments that might explode or otherwise cause damage to the family.

The workshop in the depths of the garden, he’d all but abandoned. Even if a changeling had been left in the inside workshop, it was from the outside workshop that he’d been abducted with a cunning spell from the — now fortunately deposed and dead — king of fairyland. And though Michael was quite sure the present king of fairyland, his brother Gabriel, had no intention of kidnapping him, he felt alone and vulnerable in that building. It had been violated once, and so it could be violated again.

The inner workshop would be harder to breach. For one, when it had been claimed from its previous use as a ballroom, it had been lined in leather between two layers of copper, the whole bespelled, forming an impassable barrier to both organic- and inorganic-affecting spells from outside.

In the ballroom, a sort of platform had been built, and up on it, Michael had his sky-observing apparatus, designed to help him calculate the form of spell to use.

The rest of the workshop held machines of Michael’s own invention, many of which now seemed impractical and childish to him. Take for instance his careful replica of the world of Avalon, in brass, rotating in proportional time around a miniature sun. It had been fun to build, but what practical use was it?

Since Seraphim had visited the Madhouse, the strange parallel world without magic where the Princess Royal had been raised, and brought back ideas for useful machines like shavers and mixers and clothes and dish washers, Michael had been working hard on magical replicas for such wonders.

The clothes washer was a success, except that the housekeeper had banned its use, saying it was an abomination and would run laundresses off their jobs by the score. However, Seraphim had arranged to have it tested in the royal palace and it was well on the way to becoming accepted in other, less hidebound households than the Darkwaters’ country estate. Seraphim said it would make Michael a fortune.

The automated barber, though… Michael frowned at his creation standing by the workbench near the far wall of the room. It was not a little portable thing, as Seraphim had described, because Michael had believed by making it large and capable of giving haircuts as well as shaves, it would be more popular. Particularly if it could also dress the hair of young ladies.

But all the thing had done, in actual fact, was chase Michael through the house, trying to cut… not his hair. The bits of his jacket it had got had been enough. Michael was not sure what had gone wrong with the animating spell, because when a cylindrical, man-high thing is wheeling after you brandishing knives, razors and scissors in its many arms, the only possible thing to do was to run as fast as possible.

Which he’d done, until Dyer had shot the mechanical barber through the head with a fowling piece. Michael stared at the multiple holes perforating the creature, right through the space where its directing magic had been. Well, never mind that. This was not a good time to attempt to reproduce that… experiment.

Michael perched on a high stool near the model of Avalon and tore into the letter, breaking the seal which showed – he’d swear to it – a lamb devouring a wolf, with the words Scientia et Astu beneath.

The letter started formally enough. “Dear Lord Michael Ainsling, You’ll forgive my addressing this letter to you, though we’ve never been formally introduced, or, indeed, introduced at all.”

And it proceeded strangely. “You might have heard of me, and have some idea that I am dead, but do not let that concern you, as rumors of my demise have been greatly exaggerated.”

Michael chewed the corner of his lip, perceiving that the person who’d written this letter, in strong angular handwriting, was what Mama would have called an original. And by original she normally meant that they needed help finding their way across a street, and were none too certain where they might have placed their head that day. She had been known to describe Michael himself in such a way.

“Whether you think me dead or alive, I suppose it will be a matter of some concern to you how you come to be receiving a letter from me, and also possibly some curiosity as to what you can do to help me, or hinder me, or indeed do anything in my case.

“I’ll tell you the truth. I do not know. I have cast and recast these runes, and all I can tell is that there is only one person in the world capable of understanding my work – and you must understand what keeps me prisoner here is my own work turned against me – and disabling it, so I might perhaps be set free.

“I have never had the pleasure of meeting you and the last thing I’d expect would be that the Ainslings would throw any kind of magical genius in the normal way. Pardon me for saying so, but your father was one of the accredited adventurers of my time, in more ways than one, meaning he was rather more adept at using other men’s magic all too often in order to use their wives likewise. And although your Mama was one of the beauties of her day, and indeed a diamond of the first water, I never found that she had an inquisitive and mathematical turn of mind. But then, of course, sometimes every breed throws a sport, and my runes assure me that you are that. A magical genius, I mean, not a sport, though I suppose that also.”

By this time Michael’s head was whirling and he felt he should have had rather more than one cup of tea to fortify himself to deal with this very strange missive. Or perhaps he should have had brandy, except that none of the servants would let him have it, or at least not without telling Seraphim. And maybe Gabriel. And all he needed was for his older brothers to decide he had turned into an alcoholic.

“However, before I can request that you rescue me—though I do, of course, request that—I must ask you to find my sons. The rest of them, as one has found me. You see, the woman I married, in what I’m sure now seems to me like a fit of madness, has applied some sort of spell to them, so I can no longer track them nor communicate with them.

“I’m afraid she means to do away with them and use the lands of my ancestors to form a dowry for her whelp. And while I have nothing against the mite, who was not born by the time I got confined to this place, and whom my sons inform me is a pretty good sort, in the way young females sometimes are, and not at all like her mother, I do not wish for my legacy to pass wholly into her hands and those of whichever rogue Augusta chooses to marry her to.

“I presume you have a row boat of some sort on your property, as I vaguely remember there was a lake there, in which much boating was done in the summer. I remember the lady your mother looking very fine in a lace dress upon a boat, in fact. At any rate, if you apply the formula I enclose onto a rowboat, it should bring you where you need to be to start unravelling this knot.

“Since the full extent of the knot laid by the one I must call my lady wife is not known or understood even by me, I must trust in the formula and in the kindness of a total stranger to do what must be done. And my scrying assures me you’re the only stranger who can do so.

“In full hope, if not trust, of your doing what is needful, I subscribe myself your most grateful and devoted servant, Tristram Blakley.”

Having laid the letter down on his workbench, Michael stared at it, fully wondering whether the person who’d written was the – presumed dead – author of magical carpet travel on a grand scale, or simply a madman possessed of illusions of being such a parsonage.

It was not till he turned the page and looked through the formula, written in a hand that gave the impression of impatience with writing itself, that Michael blinked, whistled under his breath, and realized that this was indeed the work of Tristram Blakley.

No one else, barring an equal genius, could have come up with such a strange mix of magical formulae, turning a simple rowboat into a vehicle of both magical transport AND divination.

And Michael knew, as he knew his own name, that he would have to try it out. It was like climbing the tallest tree or exploring the most dangerous part of the woods. He’d like to believe he was doing it for the sake of the unknown Mr. Blakley who seemed to be in a terrible position, but in his heart of hearts, he knew he was doing it for the thrill of it and to prove that he could.

Enough of nights hemmed in with nightmares of fairyland, and of moping about the otherwise deserted estate. Michael wanted to be doing. No matter how strange the doing. He must answer the call to adventure.

The Kindness of Strangers

Miss Albinia Blakley didn’t scream. Or at least she tried, but as she turned over, her hair falling out and her cap tumbling lost to the street below, it seemed to her that the air robbed both her ability to breathe and her ability to make a sound. From above she heard her mother’s scream, but not what her mother said. From below other screams joined, together with some sort of strange musical instrument that sounded like a crazed goose. Or rather many geese honking.

She caught glimpses of the street below, the glint of something like metal boxes but in many colors. She tried to use her magic to slow the fall, but of course it didn’t work, when she couldn’t even think clearly.

And then from somewhere she heard a male voice. It said a jumble of words. Or at least the words sounded like a jumble in her ears, though of course, right then anything would.

Her fall halted. Not suddenly, but first slowing down, like a leaf falling gently from a tree onto the welcoming ground.

Only she didn’t fall on the ground. Or get a chance to straighten up. Instead, she fell face first onto something hard and wooden. As she recovered breath, she realized that the something she’d fallen on was moving, gliding rapidly through the air. Or perhaps not gliding, because… She blinked as she picked herself up to sitting on the floor of a small rowboat and looked at the boy who was rowing it. He was tall and dark, scowling, and plying the oars with a will. They were charging through the air, weaving and twisting, while Mama screamed above, ever more distantly, and below the screams had changed from a horrified to a strangely excited tone as the honking stopped.

“What?” Albinia heard herself squeak as she picked herself up. “How? Who—”

“Not now,” the boy said, between panting breaths. “We must get out of here, before the location affects the spell. In the madhouse, no magic persists for long.”

Like that, they seemed to push through… something, and there was the brief cold of what Albinia had learned to call the In-Betweener. She’d never experienced it, of course, not being allowed to perform spells that dangerous – or really to escape Mama’s orbit that easily – but she’d read about it in her instruction books. It was supposed to be the time you slipped between one world and the next, and you were nowhere. There were horrible warnings against getting stuck in the In-Betweener, unable to breathe, forever. Albinia had always wondered how anyone knew you could get stuck there, or if you died or if you just stayed suspended forever. Since there was no time in the In-Betweener, could you die there?

When she’d tried to ask such questions of Mama, Mama had told her that young ladies of refinement didn’t ask stupid questions. But she’d never explained to Albinia why the questions were stupid, or, indeed, what refinement had to do with it.

Now going through, for however brief a moment she was, she realized what had originated the talk of dying in the In-Betweener. Even if no one could know if it had ever happened. Only that someone hadn’t arrived to the place where they’d meant to go. The seconds – minutes?—In-Betweener felt like she’d been dragged head-first through hell. No. Not hell, hell would have been something, even if the something was pretty unpleasant. This was just…nothing. Humans couldn’t live in nothing.

She’d had no more than a moment to think this – or perhaps think was too clear a word. She’d in fact only had a moment to feel it, like one groping in the dark for an unfamiliar shape – and then they were out, into cool clear air, with bright sun and a smattering of snow flakes dancing in it.

And the boat was falling.

The young man whose boat it was – unless, of course, he’d stolen it – rowed more frantically, and the fall slowed down and changed into a glide.

“We’re in London,” Albinia said, delightedly, recognizing things only seen in woodcuts, the Thames and the Bridge, the tower of London, as they turned and glided in the air above the city.

The boy only gave her a dirty look. But maybe he couldn’t speak. He was red in the face and rowing fast enough that if they were on water they’d be achieving quite a speed. Maybe. Because he was rowing faster with one  hand than the other, and seemed to be controlling the boat, to make them fall slowly in circles.

They weren’t the only traffic in the air. There were magic carpets, as she expected, some of them pretty scruffy and small, probably pieces of bigger gliders cut and sold at a knock-off price. Those seemed to be barely above the trees, and piloted by untidy boys carrying packages. She’d never thought of that but she supposed it made sense, to deliver purchases to ladies – and gentlemen – not willing to carry them.

There were only a couple of floating carriages, both with crests on their doors, and both, fortunately, well above them, so that there was no fear of being hit by them. She’d heard of those, or rather, read of those, in romantic novels of the kind Mama most strenuously disapproved of. They were expensive, both to build and to bespell, which meant that only the wealthiest who could command the best magicians had them. A lot of them were connected to the royal family.

The only other air traffic,  too far away for her to see clearly, was what appeared to be a sort of airborne building. It would be one of those carpet-liners, the vast magic carpet supporting a first class hotel. Such plied the routes between Europe and other continents, and Albinia had often dreamed of going on a round-the-world tour on one of them. Papa had invented the spells for those, so they could be done by normal magicians, with an economy of power.

She was looking longingly towards it, thinking it was unfair she’d never be on one of those, when her papa had invented them, when the boat dipped and swayed abruptly. They careened downwards at speed, towards a sort of little wilderness in the middle of busy London streets.

She screamed and held to the side of the boat. The boy was almost not rowing. Was he mad? He didn’t even look at her when she screamed, his eyes fixed downward.

They fell past the small rug messengers, past the trees. Albinia kept trying to keep her eyes open, while they closed in sheer terror, and she forced them open again.

She must have closed them momentarily, because the first she knew about the small lake was when they splashed with force into the water. Water splashed on her face. Ducks screamed. She opened her eyes to see a flurry of feathers and ducks.

The boy was bent forward, his hands clasping his arms, his breath coming in ragged gasps.

She was dripping water, trying to wipe at her face, her hair sodden and soaked on her head, when the boy recovered enough breath to look up and fulminate her with as hateful and dark a glare as he’d given her before. “I—” he said. “I think you must be the most cowardly boy in the whole world. Why did you scream like that?”

Answers flitted through Albinia’s head, including that she had screamed because she’d been scared, that she didn’t think she was cowardly at all, and finally that she wasn’t a boy.

But the truth was that there was a reason she’d put on Geoffrey’s long outgrown suit. It wouldn’t do for a young woman, much less what Mama called – heaven only knew why – a “gently reared female” to be traipsing around by herself and under her own recognizance. Men – if Albinia understood correctly from the novels she’d consumed – were forever wanting to do something called “stealing the virtue” of women. She had absolutely no idea what that meant. No book she consulted explained it – just like not really explaining if you could die in the Betweener —but she assumed that it meant they could take your magic or steal your magic, because after all when a magical object stopped working it was said to have lost “its virtue.”

But that had never been very clear, because a lot of the protagonists in the novels didn’t have any magical power.

All the same, and just in case, she made sure there were protective spells over her, so he couldn’t steal any of her magic – however that was done – and decided to not tell him she was a girl. Instead she said, her voice scathing and her diction precise, “Well, and you’re quite the rudest boy I’ve ever met.”

To her surprise, he laughed aloud at that, the anger disappearing. “I suppose you can’t help it,” he said. “You’re just a scrub, aren’t you? How old are you, twelve? I see your parents never even had your hair cut.”

She started to protest, then grunted something that could be taken either way.

“And what’s your name?” he asked. “I presume you’re Master Blakley…”

How did this rude boy know her name? “I’m Al,” she said. “Call me Al.”

He opened his mouth. Closed it. “I’m Michael,” he said.

He took up the oars again, and started rowing more gently towards the edge of the lake. You’d think there would be people gathering and pointing at them by now, even if it was a cold day. Albinia wondered why there weren’t, and if the boy realized this was wrong. Then she realized he hadn’t given her a last name and looked at him curiously. Right. Well, then she wouldn’t ask. You could tell from his clothes and the way he talked he was a gentleman. But why wouldn’t he give her his name?

“Where are we going?” she asked instead.

He looked embarrassed. “I thought you might want to get dried and changed before I explain.”

Clear as mud, wasn’t he?

She wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of getting upset though. “Very well,” she said. Could it be any worse than being caught by Mama?

It wasn’t till they’d stowed the boat, and he’d done something that obscured it so it had become invisible, then led her across a busy street and galloped up the steps of an elegant townhouse, that she wondered if he was kidnapping her for nefarious purposes, like those things she had read about. Again she made sure the shield was fastened over her magic. She wondered if he had enough magic to feel her spell work, as he looked over at her out of the corner of his eyes, the green in them flashing in the light in a way that made her think he was amused.

He knocked at the door to the townhouse, and stood back, waiting, his body posture denoting impatience. She wanted more than anything to ask him who they were calling on. But she didn’t fully realize how much trouble she was in, until the house was opened by a liveried footman, whose face seemed permanently arranged in an expression of something like disdain. Which changed almost immediately. The man’s eyes widened, his mouth dropped open, and he said, “Lord Michael!”

She was well brought up. Well, in some things. One of the things Mother had made sure she consumed was the manuals of peerage and etiquette. All of them.

If this young man was being addressed with Lord and his first name that meant only one thing: not only was he of a noble family, but one of the noblest.

After all, only the sons of dukes merited that courtesy title.

Michael forged ahead, with a look over his shoulder calling her, “Come!”

And they were into the house, the footman barely jumping out of the way.

“Is Seraphim in?” Michael asked.

And then she realized: the name was unusual enough, she had to be at the home of the prince Consort. There was no other possibility.

She couldn’t swoon. It just wasn’t done in boy’s clothes. But she wished she could.

Pre-order your copy now.

Writers who don’t hate you, Extraordinary Promo Post 5

*The Amazon links in this post all use my associate’s link, and therefore I earn a small commission from your purchases, at no extra cost to you.

I have a list my assistant is compiling of authors to promote who answered the call by responding if they were not afraid of being associated with this blog. I will be post them in the evening, ten at a time. Hopefully you find some new reads. If nothing else, you know these people are fearless. – SAH*

MEET DAVID BOCK

David Bock is a proud member of #TeamAndMore in several anthologies. Other stories are in the works along with a first full length novel.

David was born and raised in New York City and lived in the Capital Region of New York State until moving to East Tennessee.

After spending over 30 years in different aspects of IT (hardware, software, and training but happily not programming) and almost that long in technical and historical writing, it was time for a change. David transitioned to part time firearms training, including volunteering with Operation Blazing Sword, and got back into creative writing.

David and his spouse are the sole providers for three feral rescue cats who allow the humans to feed and shelter them.

With hobbies and interests ranging from role playing games (starting with original D&D and Traveller) to woodworking, metalworking, firearms, cooking, baking, and of course reading, David is always looking for another area to explore. The most recent additions are wine making and 3D printing.

x.com-@DavidB90524

https://www.facebook.com/brena.bock

David Bock would like you to consider his story in: Space Cowboys (Raconteur Press Anthologies)

There’s something about the Cowboy that speaks to us all. So it
only makes sense that, as humans expand into space, they’re going to
bring their Cowboys with them.Join 10 authors as they explore
what Space Cowboys would look like, why we love them, and how they deal
with the livestock that travels with humanity.

Meet A. Palmer

x.com-@captainq

A. Palmer would like you to consider his book: Wonder: Sermons From a Servant

After Trouble, after Hope, there is Wonder.

God brings people through many stages in life, and as before, these poems describe mine. I offer them humbly, in case anyone else out there feels the way I do.

Meet David Skinner

David Skinner has been writing steadily, though not prolifically, since he was twelve years old. His works tend to be weird, fantastical, and science-fictional. He is the author of the novel “The Giant’s Walk.” His stories have appeared in StoryHack and Cirsova Magazine. He has written several books for young readers, notably “The Wrecker.” He is Catholic and American, and lives in Michigan, USA.

x.com-@SpawnOfMars

David Skinner would like you to consider his book: Stellar Stories Vol. 1: Science Fiction & Wonder.

Eight stories of rockets and robots, monsters and Martians, fistfights and beauties, wonders and awe…

A young man’s blind date is kidnapped by Martians and he is drawn into her secrets. A brotherhood outside of time seeks to mend a Solar System devastated by lunatic machines. Men from a Plutonian research base confront metaphysical chaos on Charon. Two runaway sisters resolve to rescue the implanted helper-sentience of a deceased warrior. And more!

Meet J. M. Anjewierden

J. M. Anjewierden spends his days hawking others’ books in his job for the Salt Lake County Library System. It’s a job he loves, and being able to recommend good books is a big part of that. (Being in charge of the weekly Dungeons and Dragons game the library hosts for teens is pretty great too)

He has a degree in English from the University of Utah, and a Masters of Library Science from the University of North Texas.

At present he lives in Sandy, Utah with his wife and their two children. x.com-@Mr_Boffin

J. M. Anjewierden would like you to consider his book: The Long Black (The Black Chronicles Book 1)

Morgan always assumed that if she could survive growing up in the mines of Planet Hillman – feared for its brutal conditions and gravity twice that of Earth – she could survive anything. That was before she became a starship mechanic. Now she has to contend with hostile bosses, faulty equipment, and even taking care of her friend’s little girl. Once pirates show up, it’s a wonder she can get any work done at all.

Meet Richard Allen Chandler

Richard Alan Chandler lives in the Pacific Northwest with two incredibly lucky black cats. He’s been everything from a Software Developer to a Taxi Driver to an Aviation Machinist. He’s been into science fiction since his dad gave him his first Heinlein at age 9, and he’s been playing at writing for almost as long. x.com- @Dr_Mauser

Richard Allen Chandler would like you to consider his story in: Mad Science: Bits and Pieces (Raconteur Press Anthologies Book 73)

In a world where genius teeters on the edge of catastrophe, mad scientists tinker with the impossible—and sometimes succeed.
From a genetically engineered lobster staging a breakout to a grieving inventor building a gravity-defying escape vehicle, from a boy turning catfish into cybernetic heroes to a lone mechanic assembling a story-powered machine to defy both villains and overlords, these ten wildly inventive tales explore the glorious, ridiculous, and terrifying consequences of unchecked curiosity.
Expect sentient toasters, soul-splicing radiators, apocalyptic piano dollies, and one very determined vacuum cleaner. Expect laughter, dread, heart, and the occasional explosion.
Welcome to the laboratory. Mind the sparks.

Meet Sam Robb

Sam Robb is a devoted husband and the father of three teenagers. As such, he’s developed a propensity for Dad jokes. He’s also interested in long walks, urban photography, martial arts, and self-defense. When he’s not walking around Pittsburgh taking pictures and making up stories to tell, he works as a software developer. Oh, yes – he also ran for President, once upon a time. x.com-@SamRobbWrites

Follow me for updates & story excerpts at: https://samrobbwrites.substack.com/s/writing-perceptions

Sam Robb would like you to consider his book: Sigils

An open door is an invitation… but you may not like what waits on the other side.
James O’Neil is about to learn the hard way that names have power, and his graffiti tags can open doors in the forgotten byways of Pittsburgh. After an accidental summoning of a powerful and malevolent Fae, he only manages to escape by the intervention of other taggers. On the run, James needs allies, and answers, but everything seems to be conspiring against him and his world is falling apart around him. He can’t fight this alone…

Meet T.J. Marquis

T.J. Marquis is an author of science fiction and fantasy and things that fall in the spaces between.

T.J.’s works derive superficial inspiration from all of the expected fantastical IPs you can imagine, but the soul substance comes from such wonderful things as Progressive

Heavy Metal and Ambient music, from nature itself, from very good people, and of course from Jesus.

His wife and boys mean everything to him.

He hopes you enjoy his fiction, no matter who you are or where you come from, and he hopes it further inspires you and many more people to come. Pay it forward.

T. J. Marquis would like you to consider his book: How Black the Sky: A Dark Fantasy Adventure (Hero’s Metal – Dark Fantasy Adventure Book 1)

How Black the Sky

A young spellsword looking to prove his mettle stumbles on news of imminent doom. Falling in with legendary warriors from the Overland, Pierce heralds the coming attack from the hollow earth below.

His new friends are Gorgonbane. Once mercenaries, now heroes, they are the only thing standing between Overland and the horrid Monstrosities of the Underlord. His lust for power has reached its peak, but the coming invasion may not be exactly what it seems…

Pierce – a brash young man with rare blessings of strength and really bad news.

Axebourne – the fatherly berserker with infectious laughter.

Scythia – calm and motherly, her Circlet of Knowing reveals secrets.

Agrathor – a mighty spearman with an electric personality and a terrible skin condition.

Ess – Second only to the First Great Master of Convergent Reality Theory. Mysterious and alluring.The Hero’s Metal universe:

The world of Chasmgard is a place with endless secrets and a strange cosmology. A deep red sun crawls across a canvas of black, and nobody remembers why. Landlocked by a depthless Chasm, Overland and the Underlands have always vied for power and land. In How Black the Sky, we join a band of legendary warriors who may just be at the end of an age.

Meet Susana Imaginário

Susana Imaginário lives in Ireland with her husband and their extremely spoiled dog.

Her work combines mythology with slipstream fantasy and dark humour.

x.com-@Chronodendron

Susana Imaginário would like you to consider her book: Asterius (Timelessness)

My Name is Asterius, yet I have never seen the stars.You all know me as the Minotaur.This is my story.The
Minotaur himself relates to a mysterious listener the events that led
to his death in the Labyrinth as he reflects upon the meaning of good
versus evil, right versus wrong and monsters versus heroes.

Meet Misha Burnett

Misha Burnett has little formal education, but has been writing poetry and fiction for around forty years. During this time he has supported himself and his family with a variety of jobs, including locksmith, cab driver, and building maintenance.

His first four novels, Catskinner’s Book, Cannibal Hearts, The Worms Of Heaven, and Gingerbread Wolves comprise a series, collectively known as The Book Of Lost Doors.

Major influences include Tim Powers, Samuel Delany, William Burroughs, and Phillip K. Dick.

More information about upcoming projects can be found at http://mishaburnett.wordpress.com/

Misha Burnett would like you to consider his book: Misha Burnett’s Endless Summer: Twelve Strange Tales of Mankind’s Future

Misha Burnett is a master of the macabre and champion of the New Wave. His talent for tales runs the gamut of weird fiction from contemporary Urban Fantasy to Sword & Sorcery to Science Fiction, all with his unique (and slightly twisted) take!

Misha Burnett’s Endless Summer is a collection of strange and chilling tales of Mankind’s future, near and distant, from tomorrow until beyond the mark of history, through Civilization’s zenith, decline, destruction, and ultimately, Mankind’s rebirth!

Cirsova Publishing invites you to embark on an incredible and breathtaking journey across the ages, beginning with the time-travel thriller from the pages of Cirsova magazine, The Bullet from Tomorrow, and running through eleven original stories that hold up a mirror to the worst and, more importantly, the best that humanity has to offer!

Meet Jay Maynard

Jay Maynard is a lifelong computer geek whose career spans everything from embedded systems — like the ones in microwave ovens — to IBM mainframes.

When he’s not in front of a keyboard, he’s on ham radio, serving on the Fairmont, Minnesota city council, tinkering with his Mercedes-Benz 560SL, or poking around in Second Life (okay, that one still involves a computer).

A devoted science fiction fan since age eight — when his uncle gave him a copy of Larry Niven’s World of Ptavvs — Jay became Internet-famous as the Tron Guy, a role he embraced with humor and style.

He lives with his roommate and more computers than either of them can count, including six small mainframes.

x.com- @JayMaynard
https://t.co/6qcSOtuEg7

Jay Maynard would like you to consider his book: Reflections in Crystal (The Crystal Therapy Chronicles)

Magic fixes people the world cannot touch.

Alex Sullivan isn’t crazy — just angry. Angry enough to get arrested. Angry enough to be given a strange choice: prison, or an experimental magical program at a private facility in rural Missouri.

They claim to fix broken people not with medicine or therapy, but with silence, service, and a skintight suit of latex.

Inside the suit, Alex is cut off from the world — unable to speak, eat, or even cry in the ordinary way. Inside the crystal, time flows differently. There, guided by someone who seems to know him better than he knows himself, Alex must face his deepest wounds… and either heal, or shatter.

But this is no simple treatment. Alex finds himself on a journey into a hidden world where redemption is earned, the broken are made whole, and some choose never to leave the suit again.

Previously published as Foundational Laminate.

“One of the rare novels I hope becomes reality—a hard look at how to turn the antisocial into good neighbors.”
— Karl K. Gallagher, author of The Fall of the Censor and Torchship

False Preferences

The proximate cause for this post is silly: There was a young woman on x complaining that now that she’s adult she can’t talk about the things she really likes:Anime, manga, super heroes and the like. Instead she has to talk about jobs, money and careers.

The deeper cause for this post is that humans are — sigh — social apes. We do a lot of Monkey-see, Monkey-do and as the example above shows, this is not even always because the left is crazy and will punish anyone disagreeing with them no matter how vocally or not vocally. It’s because we want to fit in. We want our peers to look on us with approval. I figure that instinct is so deeply laid-in because getting chased out of your band for not fitting in was death back in pre-historic times.

In fact, in modern society there is no rational reason for someone not to talk about the things that interest her just because she’s now “and adult.” In this day and age, when the geeks won the culture war and everyone is trying to imitate us, there is a high chance at least some in her group also want to talk about the geeky stuff. But they’re all pretending to be their concept of “adults” so they don’t, so she can’t, until someone is brave enough to start.

This is the essence of preference falsification: a whole group doing something they don’t want to do, or signaling belief in something they don’t actually believe in, because they think everyone else believes this.

In certain settings preference falsification is a given: like in fields wholly taken over by the left, at least visibly wholly taken over by the left. If you’re — or think you’re — the only odd one out, you’re not going to say anything because they’d dump you.

And yet…. every time I lost my mind and ran my mouth scarily close to how I really felt in mailing lists, I’d get A LOT of emails saying “Of course I agree with you, but” from people who were doing the same but didn’t have the courage to speak out. I think this is a universal experience, which makes me wonder who really taken over those fields are.

This is what sociologists think happened with the fast turn around in Romania. Because everyone was faking loyalty to the regime and then they stopped faking it and it ripped wide open. All of a sudden it became “oh, hey, I also hate them.” Boom.

This is something tyrannical regimes face and also the left. Because, you see, the left got where they are because they weaponized communications (which were centralized, anyway) to make it seem like they were already the “sane and smart” choice. And it worked. it worked partly because in a time of mass media you didn’t have the info needed to question them. And if you did, anyway, you sounded like a crazy.

For those who are much much younger than I, picture Covid but your only sources of info are friends/family and mass media, which is all in on “the worst plague since the black death.”

If you were in that position, with the lockdowns fraying local communication, even if you talked to people over the phone, your sources of information would be limited and non-reproducible. Particularly since not everyone had a camera with them at all times. In fact most people didn’t. So there would be no photos of empty hospitals, etc.

If you went to your local hospital and it was empty, well…. guess what? Your city/county is so lucky. Or maybe people are dying too fast to make it to the hospital.

Unless you ran a mortuary and were in touch with a lot of your colleagues. And even then, how many would you be in touch with?

And all of us knows at least one case where Covid was very serious — unexpectedly — for someone, which would reinforce the fear.

I could be as skeptical as I wanted to be but I probably would have doubts even inside my own head. It would be years or decades, depending on how hard they faked that part, to figure out there hadn’t been mass death. And by then it would be a book published by an academic and read by his peers. Maybe. If he could get it published. (Which is why so much of recent history is so shaky.)

It was like this for everything, so of course, left opinion dominated. This has been changing for, oh, 20 years, as more and more of us have access to more and more information. But it still has a strong overhang, particularly in fields where it’s assumed everyone is left. Do you want to be the one to test that? With your career at risk? And as crazy as the left is?

But it’s changing, nonetheless, and the pattern seems to be first slowly, then very fast. For instance, it’s become safe to talk about religious belief. Sincerely. With fervor. (To the point the left is trying to exploit it and use it.)

And there are outbreaks of other stuff here and there. I’m not going to catalogue it. We’ve all seen it.

As with such things it seems to be “first slowly, then very fast.”

This is why the left is terrified of people being able to speak freely and why they tried to slap us with a Ministry of Information dept under the Bidentia. It’s why some bright light of the left wrote stories about how wrong ideas are a contagious virus, so you have to kill people who have them.

Because from their POV it’s not falsified preference being stripped away, it’s contagion. (Bah.) And anything is permissible to stop a contagion they consider evil.

So, here we are. They are losing control faster and faster. They’re panicked. And most people are still afraid to reveal their true preferences, with would stop the rampaging through fear of retaliation if nothing else.

The sooner the masks drop the better, but my guess is it will take another decade or two, after the century of preference falsification.

And yet, be not afraid. Speak out if you can when you can. And work for the truth.

Because the truth always wins in the end. Because it’s real, which lies aren’t.

Writers who don’t hate you, Extraordinary Promo Post 4

*The Amazon links in this post all use my associate’s link, and therefore I earn a small commission from your purchases, at no extra cost to you.

I have a list my assistant is compiling of authors to promote who answered the call by responding if they were not afraid of being associated with this blog. I will be post them in the evening, ten at a time. Hopefully you find some new reads. If nothing else, you know these people are fearless. – SAH*

Meet Cedar Sanderson

Cedar Sanderson is a multifaceted creator whose work spans both the literary and visual arts.

Cedar is celebrated for her engaging storytelling and her ability to captivate audiences with her vibrant imagery and thoughtful narratives. Her work not only entertains but also invites readers and viewers into worlds where science meets magic, and the mundane becomes extraordinary.

Her books, such as “Pixie Noir” and “Tanager’s Fledglings,” showcase her unique blend of fantasy, science fiction, and mystery, often infused with a touch of humor and deep human insight.

Her art, varying from traditional sumi-e painting to digital creations, reflects a love for both the whimsical and the scientific, with influences from her passion for history, infectious disease, and food anthropology. Known for her eclectic career that includes roles as diverse as balloon twister, face painter, and scientist, Cedar has channeled her wide range of experiences into her writing and art. https://www.facebook.com/cedar.sanderson

Cedar Sanderson would like you to try her book: Supporting Ragnarok

Valhalla is no place for a loggie. But Master Sergeant (Logistics) Danny Pederson made a career error and died heroically in combat after thirty years of nice boring supply work. He woke up dead to learn he’s stuck in a nightmare of unending battle called Valhalla. Seems the recruiters lied about Valhalla too.

Now, the only hope he has is to carry out the mission given by a mysterious messenger. Whether he likes it or not, they have to support Ragnarok… if that battle can ever happen to bring everything to an end.

Danny’s pissed, and he just wanted to go fishing. He’s about to take Ragnarok to the throat of the gods themselves. After inventory is complete.

Meet C. R. Chancy

C. R. Chancy has been in and out of dragon lairs since learning to read, usually with a map, compass, and something crunchy and good with chili sauce. Just in case. Besides reading fantasy, SF, mysteries, and history, she also enjoys beading, manga, anime, digging up survival information, poking odd color combinations, and maintaining an aquarium of half-wild guppies and one huge South American catfish that likes to lurk unseen for weeks.

She is also fond of Tropes. A few that may tend to show up include Action Survivor, Exact Words, Good Is Not Soft, and Spanner in the Works.

https://crossoverqueen.wordpress.com/

C. R. Chancy would like you to consider her book: Tell No Tales

Some nights it just doesn’t pay to rise from the grave….Corbin wants to uncover the truth behind her death at a demon’s hands. But her memories have been shattered by the grave, and even with footloose Sighted mechanic Devon Fortunato helping her search for answers, a restless ghost is up against the darkest spells and lies of the living. If they can’t unravel who sabotaged the Cunning Folk circle’s spellcast defenses, the child Corbin meant to protect will suffer a fate worse than death. Corbin’s notes hold clues, but the broken circle would rather die than admit the truth….

Meet Christopher G. Nutall

Christopher Nuttall has been planning sci-fi books since he learned to read. Born and raised in Edinburgh, Chris created an alternate history website and eventually graduated to writing full-sized novels. Studying history independently allowed him to develop worlds that hung together and provided a base for storytelling. After graduating from university, Chris started writing full-time. As an indie author, he has published fifty novels and one novella (so far) through Amazon Kindle Direct Publishing.

Professionally, he has published The Royal Sorceress, Bookworm, A Life Less Ordinary, Sufficiently Advanced Technology, The Royal Sorceress II: The Great Game and Bookworm II: The Very Ugly Duckling with Elsewhen Press, and Schooled in Magic through Twilight Times Books.

As a matter of principle, all of Chris’s self-published Kindle books are DRM-free.

Chris has a blog where he published updates, snippets and world-building notes at http://chrishanger.wordpress.com/ and a website at http://www.chrishanger.net.

Chris is currently living in Edinburgh with his partner, muse, and critic Aisha.

https://chrisnuttall.substack.com/

https://books2read.com/u/3LPKG1

https://chrishanger.net/

Christopher G. Nutall would like you to consider his book: Grandmaster (The Schooled in Magic Universe)

A new stand-alone novel set in the Schooled in Magic universe!

A hundred years before Emily, the world is in chaos. The Empire is in ruins. Old certainties are collapsing everywhere. The provinces are becoming kingdoms, the magical aristocracy is trying to redefine its place in the new world disorder, the commoners are being ground under and bold or desperate men are preparing their bids for apotheosis or nemesis. The world teeters on the brink … and Whitehall School is caught in the middle, a pawn of greater powers.

For common-born magicians Alan and Irene, scorned and despised by their aristocratic peers, the challenge is to keep their heads down long enough to graduate and go out into the world as qualified magicians. For Walter, Heir to House Ashworth, the challenge is to take advantage of the chaos to build an unassailable position and put himself in firm control. For Hasdrubal, Charmsmaster of Whitehall, the challenge is to protect the school from outside powers seeking to subvert or destroy it …

Meet Julie Frost

Julie Frost grew up an Army brat, traveling the globe. She thought she might settle down after she finished school, but then she married a pilot and moved six times in seven years. She’s finally put down roots in Utah with her family–her husband and son, a herd of guinea pigs, and a “kitten” who thinks she’s a warrior princess–and a collection of anteaters and Oaxacan carvings, some of which intersect. She enjoys birding and nature photography, which also intersect, and managed to photograph 500 bird species in the US in 2023. Utilizing her degree in biology, she writes werewolf fiction while completely ignoring the physics of a protagonist who triples in mass. She also writes other things, on occasion, as the fancy strikes her.

Her short fiction has appeared in Weird WWIV, Straight Outta Dodge City, Monster Hunter Files, Galaxy’s Edge, Writers of the Future, The District of Wonders, StoryHack, Unlikely Story, Stupefying Stories, and too many anthologies to count. Her novels are available on Amazon, and you can find her on Facebook.

https://www.facebook.com/julie.frost.7967

Julie Frost would like you to consider her book: Joy Shall Be in Heaven

A Guardian Angel to serial killers
His newest Charge
And a grimoire with a Free! Demon! Inside!

Nachumiel’s job is to be the Still Small Voice whispering into the ears of sociopaths, in a vain attempt to turn them from the path of destruction they’re merrily traipsing down. Fresh off yet another assignment up to his hips in blood and buried in corpses, he’s beginning to wonder if he garners assignments like this because he’s a massive screwup who can’t damage these people any more than they already are.

His new Charge is different—but not in a good way. Gerry finds a malevolent spellbook holding a demon bound within, whose power even other demons are afraid of. Now Nachi has to team up with his argumentative opposite number and endeavor to undermine both Gerry and his damnable new friend before a child is sacrificed and the grimoire demon unleashes Hell on Earth. All he can try is what has always failed in the past…

And hope he doesn’t end up bleeding out on the floor himself.

Meet Caitlin Walsh

Caitlin Walsh is a mom from Upstate New York. She has two young vivacious children who have inspired her life in ways she could have never imagined!

As a child, Caitlin would read the “funny pages” and exclaim “I want to do that!” While she’s been publishing on the internet for twenty years, it’s been her work with the independent author community where she’s truly found a warm and loving home.

Caitlin’s new “Mama Bunny” series is a unique expression of her artistic interpretations as she explores the joys and challenges of motherhood. An exceptional mix of comics and short essays on family life, this series has something for everyone. It’s guaranteed to reach down into reader’s hearts and show them how the simplest moments in our everyday lives are, in reality, the beautiful seeds of cherished memories.

https://www.facebook.com/caitlin.woods.52

Caitlin Walsh would like you to consider her book: Mama Bunny #1: Comics and Stories

Parenting is tough, but it’s also rewarding. And occasionally even hilarious. Now collected for the first time, follow Mama Bunny and her family through this series of mostly-autobiographical strips and written stories as they navigate the ups and downs of dinnertime, chores, and all the other day-to-day adventures of a stay-at-home mom trying to raise and teach two children.

Meet M. C. A. Hogarth

Daughter of two Cuban political exiles, M.C.A. Hogarth was born a foreigner in the American melting pot and has had a fascination for the gaps in cultures and the bridges that span them ever since. She has held many jobs, but is currently a full-time parent, artist, writer and anthropologist to aliens, both human and otherwise.

For a complete reading order, check http://mcahogarth.org. Or for a quick-start:

Mindtouch (story of forever friendship in SF setting)

Earthrise (space adventure romance romp)

An Heir to Thorns and Steel (epic fantasy)

Spots the Space Marine (military SF, tense, quick-paced)

The Worth of a Shell (tri-sexed alien society fantasy)

Black Blossom (sociological SF, philosophical, quiet)

M. C. A. Hogarth would like you to consider her book Business for the Right-Brained: (A Guide for Artists, Writers, Musicians, Dancers, Crafters, And All the Other Dreamers)

A career as a freelance artist? Not possible, you say? The Three Jaguars beg to differ! In this cartoon and checklist-filled guide, Marketer, Business Manager, and Artist walk you through the challenges of starting and building a creative business. Topics include productizing your work; metrics and tracking; communication and networking strategies; Day Job wrangling; pricing; branding; and even how to market yourself without feeling (shudder) slimy! If you’ve been looking for a clear (and humorous!) guide to the philosophy and practicalities of being a professional artist… this is your book. Also, did I mention the cartoons?

Meet L. A. Gregory

L.A. Gregory grew up surrounded by books and nature, and frequently combined the two by going up an oak tree with the newest from Andre Norton or the oldest from J.R.R. Tolkien. After spending years pretending to be Eowyn, Simsa, or Lessa, she started putting her daydreams on paper. Now she lives in North Carolina with a little less nature and a little more books, and gleefully indulges her inner teen with stories of animals, spaceships, and shapeshifters.

She can be reached via her Facebook page under “L.A. Gregory”.

https://x.com/Aggrokitty


https://t.co/rTyNmkk96j

L. A. Gregory would like you to consider her book: Hawkwing: A Novel of the Bitterlands

Kestrel’s land is scarred in ways its inhabitants cannot begin to understand, built on long-poisoned earth and menaced by twisted plants and animals. Farmers, hunters, and magic-users fight a long battle to create safe havens and reclaim lost ground, but their casualties mount over generations. Kestrel knows little and cares less about the patterns that shape her world. She’s a shapechanger and healer who has spent the handful of years since reaching womanhood cleansing the wildlife of her blighted land with medicine and magic. Sure of her place and confident in her skills, she takes care of her own and doesn’t poke at things that don’t concern her. But when she returns from a routine journey with her brother to find her home ransacked and empty, Kestrel must gather her remaining family and search for new allies before old magic and older hatred rob her kin of their freedom, their lives, and possibly their souls.

Meet Dave Freer

Dave Freer is a former Marine Biologist who specialized in fish (an Ichthyologist), proving that you can end up as an academic even if you did win a sports bursary (for rock-climbing) to take you through college. At seventeen was a conscripted Medic during the Angolan/South African conflict. Politically from an old fashioned ‘liberal’ (you know, believing in equality of all people before the law, equality of opportunity, that sort of thing) anti-apartheid family this was quite an experience. He lived through it and came out as a 45 year old in a nineteen year old body, which may explain his frequent confusion. He is still deciding just what do when he grows up. His first postgraduate job was as Chief Scientific Officer for the Western Cape Commercial Shark fishery. As a biologist he’s spent a lot of time working in water no sane person would go near, having encounters (both in small boats and in the water) with sharks, crocodiles, hippopotamuses, electric rays and a number of other toxic/lethal creatures. He has worked as a salvage diver, run two major fish farms (he’s a very good plumber), as well as doing some steeplejack work. Additionally he has worked as the relief chef for a group of exclusive luxury game/ ecotourism/ whitewater-rafting lodges. He has an obsession with food, recreating traditional fare, something he uses in his books. He’s a top mountaineer and rock-climber, opening many of his country’s best rock routes. He’s a fanatical spiny-lobster diver and flyfisherman and the author of a number of articles on both. If it is dangerous and a little crazy — he’s done it. Besides writing some amazingly boring but fundamental papers on shark age and growth and reproductive biology, he has authored or co-authored about twenty novels, most of which are sf/fantasy. He’s also written a lot of shorter fiction, appearing in various collections.

He lives on a wonderful remote Island off the coast of Tasmania, Australia, a ten hour ferry trip to anywhere, with 3 dogs to do his thinking, 3 cats to be waited on, two sons to lead him astray, and a wonderful wife to be patient with him and them, although it is a task that would tax a saint. Sometimes he wonders why he does this. Other times he just wonders. See his webpage if you really want more.

https://www.facebook.com/dave.freer.5686

Dave Freer would like you to consider his book: Cloud Castles

Augustus Thistlewood was an idealist. The youngest scion of a vastly wealthy family, he’d come to help the poor, deprived people of the strange world of Sybill III – a gas-dwarf world with no habitable land. The human population, descendants of a crashed convict transport, lived on a tiny, crowded, alien antigravity plate they called ‘the Big Syd’, drifting through the clouds in the upper atmosphere. It was a few square miles of squalor, in a vast sea of sky, ruled by the degenerate relics of two alien empires.
The problem was that the people of the Big Syd wanted to help themselves, first – to his money, his liberty, and even his life.
Only two things stood between them and this: the first was his ‘assistant’ Briz, – a ragged urchin he’d picked up as a guide. She reckoned if anyone was going to steal from Augustus, it was going to be her, even if she had to keep him alive so that she could do it. And the second thing was Augustus himself. He didn’t know what ‘giving up’ meant. Actually, he didn’t know what most things meant. As a naïve, wide-eyed innocent blundering through the cess-pit of Sybill III, he was going to have to learn, mostly the hard way. Some of that learning was going to be out in the strange society that existed on the endless drifting clumps of airborne vegetation, and the Cloud-Castles of the aliens who hunted across them. Most of it was learning that philanthropy wasn’t quite what they’d taught him in college.

Meet Nathan C. Brindle

Mr. Brindle is a software engineer of a certain age and girth. He can do nothing about the former, but is attempting to do something about the latter. He is happily married to his lady Sally, with whom he has two cats and several children of other parents, one of whom has graced him with two grandchildren upon whom he dotes. His educational background is in History, mostly American with a side of Japanese.

Before we go much farther and you lose interest, his website is http://nathanbrindle.com .

He is a Freemason of long standing; Master Mason, Past Master of his lodge, a Knight Templar in the York Rite of Freemasonry, and a 33° Sovereign Grand Inspector General and Honorary Member of the Supreme Council, 33°, of the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry for the Northern Masonic Jurisdiction of the United States of America. As if that were not cool and sublime enough, he once held the single most badass title in Freemasonry: Thrice Potent Master of the Lodge of Perfection, 14°. And he has been Secretary of more Masonic bodies and organizations than any sane man should ever aspire to become.

He is also a licensed amateur radio operator, Amateur Extra Class, and only wishes he had a broken 6-meter amplifier that could project mini-singularities.

Otherwise, he’s either working, writing, honey-dewing, or playing with his grandchildren.

Nathan C. Brindle would like you to consider his book: I’m The Beautiful But Evil Space Princess Who Rules A Galactic Empire But Really Wants To Leave People Ruthlessly Alone!

Alice is the Imperial Princess Regnant of the Galactic Empire. At 22, she has been thrust into power after her father (the Emperor) and her two older brothers have all died in various ways. Her Imperial Chancellor, Lord Rupert, does everything he can to support her, but has somewhat different ideas about how the Empire should be run than did his late Emperor.

Alice has one major problem: She cannot be crowned Empress Regnant until she marries and produces an heir.

But Alice, being kept busy three days a week by interminable audiences with petitioners, and the rest of the week with what she terms “mostly busy work”, has no real way to meet young men — well, reasonably eligible young men, anyway, and of her own age — with whom she might eventually take up and form a household. And she chafes at the necessity of trying to rule, hands-on, an Empire so huge it cannot be truly ruled by any one person to begin with.

She just wants to leave people alone, as her father and his predecessors did for centuries.

Meet Becky R. Jones

Writing fiction is career number three or so for Becky R. Jones. She’s worked as a secretary in the world of Wall Street, built sets for TV pilots and shows, been an admin assistant for a mobile home park management company, built airplanes, and finally went back to school to get an MA and PhD in political science. Through it all she read fantasy, science fiction, and anything else she could get her hands on – cereal boxes included. Reading provides an escape, laughter, tears, and different perspectives on life.

After 20+ years teaching in different parts of the country, Becky realized that faculty politics had lost their allure and fled academia. She decided to try her hand at telling stories like the ones she loved to read. “Academic Magic” was her first work of fiction, quickly followed by a number of short stories, and the next two books in the “Academic Magic” series. She currently lives in the Dallas-Ft. Worth area with her husband and two cats.

For more fiction shorts and political ramblings, please visit her at: ornerydragon.com.

Becky R. Jones would like you to consider her book: Academic Magic

Zoe O’Brien has found her dream job at a small liberal arts college teaching the history of Medieval witchcraft and magic. Academic life is exactly what she expected it to be…until the squirrels stop by to talk with her and her department chair and best friend turn out to be mages.

Zoe discovers a world of magic and power she never knew existed. She and other faculty mages race to stop a coven from raising a demon on the winter solstice while simultaneously grading piles of final exams and reading the tortured prose of undergraduate term papers. Can Zoe master her new-found powers in time?

Creativity, Markets and Blindness

Is it time for “the right abandoned artistic fields” and “the right isn’t very creative because of [psychological reasons that make no sense]” again? I still had my “You must obey the pope even when he’s not speaking ex-cathedra and is running his mouth on politics” decorations up. And it was a slog to put them up when I’d just put up the “The US is going to start nuclear war” decorations. At least “the right isn’t creative” is a seasonal festival, returning on the regular, predictable as the seasons.

It’s all so TIRESOME. Sometimes I feel like this blogging things is mostly me standing and screaming into the hurricane, and no one listens until someone else picks up the cry and suddenly people listen to THAT person. It’s annoying. I don’t think I’m a priestess of Apollo, and anyway, what I say aren’t prophecies, just what anyone with two brain cells to rub together and a willingness to open their eyes would see.

You know the myth, right? It’s sank into the collective consciousness, and people bring it out on the regular as a “everybody knows.” (Always be wary of “everybody knows”. Not so long ago everybody knew that the USSR was beating the US in war technology and just so much better equipped and organized. And everyone also knew that if you lined up Chinese four by four and had them jump off a cliff, the line would never end, because they reproduced so fast. Yeah.)

It goes something like this: The left controls the arts and the culture, because the left is SO creative. This makes sense because they’re independent minded and ready to challenge conventions, which is essential for creation. Meanwhile the right abandoned the arts because they didn’t think the arts were important, and preferred to be in fields like engineering and sales and such, where there’s more money and they don’t have to buck convention. Because the right is convention-bound, stodgy and never willing to question authority or received wisdom. So, even if they could create, their stuff would be boring, because there would be nothing new in it.

I’ll concede this is absolutely true… In the movies and books produced by the left where the entire world is stuck in an imaginary 1950s, where every communist is a sweet, wild free spirit and everyone who opposes them are hypocrites living conventional lives.

In the real world this myth has more problems than I can begin to explain. But I’m going to try.

First of all the most recent resurgence of this arrant nonsense was someone self-described as right (of course) on twitter throwing a fit because a new publishing house supposedly on the right is only publishing non fiction, and it’s all rehashed stuff. Now, this publishing house was started by Tucker Carlson, presumably to have another means to scream about the Jewish threat or menace question. (I’ll admit I’m a little sore at the Zionist conspiracy right now. Look, they say regardless of ancestry I can’t have access to the space laser controls. They say that they know exactly what I’d do with them and so I can’t have them. I say they have no idea what I’d do with them. I’m a creative. I have so many ideas… Anyway….) But also, what does what a publishing house even if it were run by someone sane and not in the pay of radical Islamists, have to do with creativity? How does it prove the right isn’t creative.

Then as — mostly some of you — started doing yeoman work in smacking the idiot, the whole myth came tumbling out. (Look, if you put nonsense in your head, think about it before you vomit it out.)

First there is the reason the right isn’t very creative. The most real-world-adjacent one is “Because there’s no money in it.” Now, that’s true for the vast majority of artists and writers. I make probably what I would make as a medium-paid secretary in this region, and that puts me in the top 1% of authors. For most traditionally published authors, in the days I was in that treadmill, the income was 5k per book and a book per year. I’m given to understand it’s lower now, but I haven’t cared enough to look into it. This is why book writing has devolved to the province of married (or wealthy single) women and gay men. I.e. those who have other means of income. This is a problem for various other reasons, but it isn’t actually RELATED to a left versus right.

I mean the idea that the left isn’t at all interested in money is, again, only true in the movies and books the left produces. In real life most leftists are being paid handsomely to not examine the contradictions inhering in their positions. Very handsomely. I’m often flabbergasted at how much they get paid by NGOs and cultural this and that to do what I do here every day for not much at all.

Look — pinches bridge of nose — if the right wingers were motivated solely or mostly by money, they wouldn’t be on the right. The left has the pipelines of book to promotion, to TV expert to….

So you can take that little marker of “The right only cares about money, so they won’t do art.”

Okay, you say, but the right isn’t creative, because they believe in received wisdom and are afraid to say or do anything out of line.

Are you for real now?

I’m sixty three (dear Lord, it sure flies by when you’re having fun) and ALREADY I was taught all the leftist shibboleths and leftist worldview in school in the mid 20th century. We all were. The education was already infused by Marxist assumptions about class and the behavior of the various widgets classes. Not to mention races, etc.

And the culture was already hard-core dominated by leftists back then. Don’t believe me? Go watch any old movie and analyze the stereotypes deployed. It’s all the creative, poor-but-idealistic leftist against the rich powerful and most of all evil businessman/woman. Or the religious man and woman. Or both. Old book have this too. Even Agatha Christie, who — sorry, but it’s true — was kind of the distilled wisdom of British middle class for her time treated communists as sort of cute little pets. Wrong, of course, but oh, so morally invested and burning with righteousness.

So in fact to become anything to the right of Lenin we had to reject received wisdom, look beyond what we’d been taught and think for ourselves.

Also, let’s be real, anyone looking at the current literary dahlings and/or Hollywood and saying that’s solid left because the right has no creativity and doesn’t question received wisdom needs their head examined.

The left’s cultural output has become the same slogans they shout continuously, with threadbare plots through which embodied stereotypes of their oft-told-tales walk. There are no real people, no real conflict. They’re never ending (mostly im)morality plays recreating things they drank with mother’s milk. Which is why it’s not doing particularly well.

And this is because on the left you can get kicked out of the club for doubting even one little piece of the bolus of received wisdom that makes up the “leftist view”. You’re leftist in everything but you think that trans women shouldn’t share abused women’s shelters? Into the outer darkness with you, as J. K. Rowling found out.

So, the right not being creative because we’re just parroting received wisdom is nonsense. Once more, if that were true, we’d be… leftists. Because that has been the received wisdom for a hundred years and counting.

No, the truth is that Marxism first captured educational institutions, starting with the more elite ones. Look, it is an obvious mechanism. Academics feel that they aren’t appreciated enough. They spend years studying and working and in the end they get prestige, maybe, but very little else. So a gospel of envy, telling them that everything should be controlled by the government is received with glad cries. They just ignored the bit about the workers, and decided they’d be in charge. After all the lunkheads will need the big brains to guide them, right? In fact, Marx was one of them, in spirit if not in fact, so they took to him like a pig to his wallow.

From there, because academics are prestige and because “the smartest people believe this” it was a trivial matter to conquer the beachheads of the culture, in the form of newspapers, publishing houses, filmmaking studios, etc. And this at a time when the technology made those centralized and easy to control with very few people relatively speaking.

Once they were in, they only hired their like, because after all, anyone who believes differently is both stupid and evil, and you SURELY don’t want to hire THOSE people.

And since they could crank out endless myths of the stodgy conservatives who were stupid and evil and hypocrites, that myth did more of the work than any conscious decision to discriminate. The average person fed on the mass-information-entertainment industrial complex knew what was REALLY going on in the life of a seemingly pious minister or a seemingly clean-living business man. And anyone who tried to write different was just trying to perpetuate that evil.

Etc. Ad nauseum.

It was a very successful inverting of roles, which has allowed the left to successfully paint themselves as fighting the evils of a right-dominated culture which has existed for at least 100 years.

The creatives who could not, would not parrot the line at least enough to get in? Were never seen, published or hired. And those who managed to parrot it weren’t doing any good, because they couldn’t question the line, of course. Any step out of the perceived wisdom and they’d be cast down into the outer darkness.

That’s the only way — for those of you who are following at home — you get the cultural machinery captured by ONE side of the debate. It’s if the other side is being kept forcibly out.

So what’s to be done?

Well, the left has run out of creative steam. To be fair, they were starting to run out pretty hard in the eighties. They only sold because they were (quite literally) the only game in town.

And fortunately tech now allows for indie publishing and really art distribution. No, you won’t get in the prestige channels. If you want to get that you must be a hard-dyed …. I think Maoist at this point. They keep moving left. BUT you can, and many of us do, make a living in the vineyard of words. It’s not crazy money, unless you hit big, but it’s decent for indoor work, in the warm/cool. (Depending on season.) And you can do it until you die with your hands on the keyboard. You’d want to anyway, so why not?

Now we still can’t do movies, true. But it’s this close. It’s so close you can taste it. Well, I can. I want to get healthy so I can play in THAT playground too. Because, ooh, boy, 12 year old me is somewhere inside my mind having spazzfits of excitement. I want to play with that. I’ll be most seriously displeased if I’m too old to do it by the time the tech is here.

Publishing houses? Well, there’s a place for them, but they have to be small and ELASTIC. I am not privy to their inner works, but from the outside Raconteur Press seems to have a good model and be adapting fast.

BUT the important thing? You don’t need them. Sure, if you want them, you can find one, probably (Be careful. I’d recommend Rac, but I don’t know much about other new presses and some don’t do much for you.) BUT you don’t need it.

You can just do things!

Now go do them. Because if you must create, there are so many channels to get it in readers’ hands.

Do I need to say it? I will anyway: What a time to be alive!

Stop arguing over whether the right is creative, and go create.

Silence in the pews!

I WAS on my way to bed, but stopped by to do one more thing (set a schedule for tomorrow. LITERALLY just that.) and…

This was in my inbox. It said for immediate release, and of COURSE I had to share (Congratulations to one of my structural editors D. Jason Fleming, the editor of three of the finalists!):


2026 PROMETHEUS AWARD FINALISTS CHOSEN FOR BEST NOVEL

Works by Dave Freer, Karl K. Gallagher, Sarah Hoyt, J. Kenton Pierce and Harry Turtledove selected as finalists

The Libertarian Futurist Society, a nonprofit all-volunteer international organization of liberty-loving science fiction/fantasy fans, has announced five finalists for the Best Novel category of the Prometheus Awards.

Here are the Best Novel finalists in brief, in alphabetical order by author: Storm-Dragon, by Dave Freer (Raconteur Press); War by Other Means, by Karl K. Gallagher (Kelt Haven Press); No Man’s Land, by Sarah Hoyt (Goldport Press); A Kiss for Damocles, by J. Kenton Pierce (Raconteur Press); and Powerless, by Harry Turtledove (CAEZIK SF & Fantasy.)

Full-length reviews of each Best Novel finalist, explaining how each fits the distinctive focus of the Prometheus Awards, have been (or soon will be) posted on the Prometheus Blog. Meanwhile, here are capsule descriptions of all five finalists:

Storm-Dragon, by Dave Freer (Raconteur Press): The Young Adult science fiction novel centers on a boy who saves and adopts an intelligent alien pet on an ocean-dominated colony planet with dangers both alien and human. In the spirit of Heinlein’s Farmer in the Sky and Alan Dean Foster’s Flinx novels, the story centers on Skut and Podge, two resourceful middle-school boys from refugee families. As they make friends in their new home, the boys confront class bullies and repressive teachers, cope with mob behavior and navigate the ocean’s tricky shores. In the process, they interact and communicate more with their orphaned young “dragon,” an electrosensitive six-limbed alien creature who may be more intelligent and formidable than it appears. Aimed primarily at ages 8 to 18 and avoiding explicit ideology, the novel gradually expands to include parents, administrators and other adults enmeshed in the colony town’s increasingly corrupt politics, which threatens livelihoods through onerous regulations, taxes and property confiscations. Ultimately, a violent invasion from human raiders threatens the colonists’ broader rights. With a strong career background in fishing and oceanography, Freer focuses more on the plausible ecology and boy-centered adventures than the politics of this plausible frontier planet, while allowing his live-and-let-live, peace and freedom themes to emerge naturally.

War by Other Means,by Karl K. Gallagher (Kelt Haven Press): Finding ways to come to mutual agreements through diplomacy and trading rather than coercion is a central theme in Book 7 of Gallagher’s frequent-Prometheus-finalist Fall of the Censor series. Following the liberation of dozens of worlds from the Censorate oppression, newly appointed ambassador Wynny Landry strives to prevent the rebellion from falling apart. Her task: convincing their governments to cooperate and forge trade deals for excess missiles despite differing cultures, interests and pressures. The novel centers on problems arising on Fiera, which formed a world government following the Censorite attack and atomic-bombing of 16 cities. So many state-commanded resources were put into defense and so much manpower lost to conscription that Fiera’s economy is failing. Meanwhile local politics keeps warships nearby, preventing them from supporting the alliance’s interplanetary defense. The story reminds us that even good and democratic societies can falter when politics, taxation, conscription and pork-barrel politics undermine their freedom, strength and adaptability. Among the libertarian themes: war as the health of the state, how governments can slide into despotism, the evils of slavery, the dysfunction of pork-barrel politics, and how censorship only makes people lust for forbidden fruit.

No Man’s Land, by Sarah Hoyt (Goldport Press): The three-volume novel blends science fiction, fantasy, suspense, mystery, romance, adventure, political intrigue and a plausible “alien” biology in a universe where sufficiently advanced science is indistinguishable from magic. In an interstellar future with settled human planets of widely differing societies, a freedom-favoring federation sends an ambassador to certify the final stages of induction of a previously lost colony. The first-contact story eventually focuses on a hidden world where the population has been genetically shaped to make everyone hermaphroditic. Both epic and intimate, with chapters alternating in perspective between the young human ambassador and an archmage, the novel becomes a love story about found family amidst a wider conspiracy threatening the federation’s commitment to equal liberty. Ultimately, in a multi-layered work launching her Chronicles of Elly series, Hoyt gradually weaves in a variety of libertarian themes while offering a radically different take on gender and sexuality than Ursula K. Le Guin’s classic novel The Left Hand of Darkness.  Among them: the virtues and benefits of cooperation, individualism, private property, tolerance, equal justice and individual choice, providing a stark contrast with the  evils of aggression, tyranny, slavery and discrimination against sexual minorities.

A Kiss for Damocles, by J. Kenton Pierce (Raconteur Press): The science fiction saga, which launches the author’s Tales From the Long Night series, illuminates the ethics and efficacy of free trade and self-defense as a proper foundation for civilization. The novel is set on a colony planet where humans in towns and homesteading communities are struggling to recover centuries after a catastrophic attack and volcanic cataclysm that set back and severely limits their use of advanced technology. At the story’s heart is Shai, a young homesteader facing harsh frontier conditions, corrupt Townie politics, dangerous native species, and sinister forces amidst still-functional A.I.-powered orbiting war machines. Pierce celebrates the self-reliance and resilience of self-regulating frontier communities that survive and evolve based on the hard-won realities of voluntarism, mutual respect and cooperation. But this is also a cautionary tale about the deceptive idealism of a command-and-control ideology and the perennial tendency towards abuse of power, reflected in the Townies’ push for higher taxation, fiat money and indoctrinating state takeover of education. Narrating from her wry but hopeful perspective, Shai becomes a leader in her community’s struggles to defend their freedom, preserve their heritage and restore their world.

Powerless, by Harry Turtledove (Caezick SF & Fantasy): Inspired by Vaclav Havel’s classic essay “Power of the Powerless,” this alternate history is set decades ago in a communist America where small moments of defiance or quiet resistance to governmental repression have unexpectedly big consequences. Set in the western United States dominated by a Soviet-Union-fostered socialist tyranny, the novel begins with one shopkeeper’s impulsive and fed-up act of taking down from his grocery storefront window a required propaganda poster expressing solidarity with the state revolution. In a dystopian society demanding utter submission and insistent on propping up its legitimacy, that simple act has a ripple effect on the shopkeeper, his wife and two children, and the wider world. Focusing on small acts of decency and honesty, the realistic yet inspiring story reveals how communism smothers the human spirit, denies reality, censors news, imposes lies and undercuts everyday life even when it doesn’t rise to the level of genocide or outright totalitarianism but strives to embody Czechoslovakia’s 1968 vision of “socialism with a human face.” Mirroring the psychological and political distress of many today for speaking the truth, Powerless is timely in reflecting the challenges in societies that claim to uphold freedom but suppress facts to enforce conformity.

Fourteen 2025 novels were nominated by LFS members for this year’s award. Other Best Novel nominees, listed in alphabetical order by author: Red Heart, by Max Harms; Forged for Destiny and Forged for Prophecy, by Andrew Knighton; All the Humans Are Sleeping, by John C.A. Manley; For Emma, by Ewan Morrison; Planting Life: Shut the Kingdom, by Laura Montgomery; Where the Axe is Buried, by Ray Nayler; The Underachiever, by David A. Price; and Caballeros del Camino, by R.H. Snow.
The Best Novel winner will receive an engraved plaque with a one-ounce gold coin. An online Prometheus awards ceremony, open to the public, is tentatively planned for mid-August. Science fiction fan and author Ilya Somin, a law professor at George Mason University and the B. Kenneth Simon Chair in Constitutional Studies at the Cato Institute, will be this year’s keynote speaker and celebrity guest presenter. The date of the ceremony will be announced in mid July once the winners are known for both annual categories, including the Prometheus Hall of Fame for Best Classic Fiction.

The Prometheus Award, sponsored by the Libertarian Futurist Society (LFS), was established and first presented in 1979, making it one of the most enduring awards after the Nebula and Hugo awards, and one of the oldest fan-based awards currently given in sf.

The Prometheus Hall of Fame category for Best Classic Fiction, launched in 1983, is presented annually with the Best Novel category. This year’s Hall of Fame finalists are The Star Dwellers, a 1961 novel by James Blish; Brave New World, a 1932 novel by Aldous Huxley; That Hideous Strength, a 1945 novel by C.S. Lewis; Salt, a 2000 novel by Adam Roberts;  and Singularity Sky, a 2003 novel by Charles Stross.

The Prometheus Awards recognize outstanding works of speculative or fantastical fiction (including science fiction and fantasy) that dramatize the perennial conflict between Liberty and Power, favor voluntarism and cooperation over institutionalized coercion, expose the abuses and excesses of coercive government, and/or critique or satirize authoritarian systems, ideologies and assumptions.

Above all, the Prometheus Awards strive to recognize speculative fiction that champions individual rights, based on the moral/legal principle of non-aggression, as the ethical and practical foundation for peace, prosperity, progress, justice, tolerance, mutual respect, civility and civilization itself.

All LFS members have the right to nominate eligible works for all categories of the Prometheus Awards, while publishers and authors are welcome to submit potentially eligible works for consideration using the guidelines linked from the LFS website’s main page.

A  judging committee, drawn from the membership and chaired by LFS co-founder Michael Grossberg, selects the Prometheus Award finalists for Best Novel from members’ nominations. Following the selection of finalists, all LFS upper-level members (Full members, Sponsors and Benefactors) have the right to vote on the Best Novel finalist slate to choose the annual winner.

Membership in the Libertarian Futurist Society is open to any freedom-loving science fiction/fantasy fan interested in how speculative or fantastical fiction can enhance an appreciation of the value of liberty and broaden public recognition of the dangers and evils of tyranny and the abuses more prevalent under the State’s centralized and coercive powers.

For a full list of past Prometheus Award winners in all categories, visit our site. For reviews and commentary on these finalists and other works of interest to the LFS, visit the Prometheus blog. For more information, contact LFS Publicity Chair Chris Hibbert (publicity@lfs.org).

The Boss is Away the Huns will Play

By Holly the Assistant

(Sarah is working on comments from the editor for Witch’s Daughter today, and also letting the antibiotic kick in.)

I have very little to say today, I’m afraid: the sun is shining between much needed rainstorms, my rain gauge blew away, the weeds are growing faster than the gardens . . . and the dogs relocated the front yard to the sidewalk, a joint project achieved separately in between spates of trying to murder each other. (No, the photo is not one of them. They’re in time out.)

I do finally have the new computer up and running. The old one failed in an entirely improbable and perplexing way, with first Firefox, then Discord, then finally the OS refusing to recognize keyboard input, over a week’s time. Pale Moon, which is my secondary browser, and LibreOffice still both talk to both keyboards. When you can type text in some programs but not in the OS search function box . . . well, it’s probably MY computer.

Spring is as busy as fall around here, with the trees currently enthusiastically enlisting everyone in their reproduction projects whether or not we’re willing participants. And of course the grass is growing, the wildfires are burning, and we’re side-eyeing the large puffy clouds overhead for their intentions regarding rain, hail, and lightening.

The oldest cat is on my lap discouraging gardening work by emitting sleepions, the younger two are probably opening cupboards somewhere, or maybe rewiring something (they are Indy and company’s full siblings). What’s up at your place?

Does anyone want to help remodel with the cats? The Wolf just said something about paint . . .

No promo tonight

But hopefully tomorrow.

Sorry, I woke up with a raging ear infection, but I should be okay tomorrow. I have antibiotics and pain meds…

I know, the promo shouldn’t take brain power, but it does.