Wednesday, June 29, 2011

TOUCHSTONE.


My first attempt at serialized fiction is running at 1889 Labs. It's another historical fabrication, swords, blood and muscle in a world not unlike your own, which began with the contemplation of Plato's Critias and Timaeus.

I was looking at his idea that the perfect democratic society would maintain a military caste separate from the rest of the community. If they were esteemed, as Plato would have it, it would be one thing, but if, as with the first century Celtiberians, a fighting force was sent out just to keep the numbers of restless young men down, that would be another.

In a caste society I thought, it would serve to limit the lower classes, it would keep the rest of society in a state of constant vigilance, and as long as trade could continue unhindered, it would do no harm to the economy.

Hypothetical, of course, but I had fun with the idea.


Here's an extract from the first chapter:


Sitting on the balcony palisade, turning his back on the cold beauty of the early morning tarn, Dragan sipped the mug of bitter tea. It needled at his gut, but after a few moments the soothing effect of the opiates seeped though cramped muscles and cooled the pain behind his eyes. The only concession he made to the cold was to hold the mug up near his face so the steam curled gently under his chin and across his cheek. Bare-chested he sat, the rough cloth of his cloak tied and belted at his hips, broad back proffered as a single defense against the elements.

Freya paused in the shadows. After twelve years of teamwork, her partner’s formidable physical presence could still check her stride. She watched him sitting, silent and still, like part of the stonework on which he balanced, as hard and solid and impervious as rock.

There was nothing in him small or mean: the spirit of the man was what you saw. He was in all things constant. Stable. Firm. Immovable. She smiled; after so many years she had relied on that strength too many times to recall, or chaffed at his stubbornness, or thanked the fickle gods for his patience. He was everything she knew she could not be, and that was good. It served them well. It always had.

He didn’t change, or changed so slowly the small erosions went unnoticed. In a world where nothing lasted, where there was nothing she could hold that would always remain, he was her one sure thing. In this world, he was the only one, the only thing she trusted without question.

His hair too, would have to be cut. It fell forward like a wreath of rusted wheat that knotted around his ears and bunched into ringlets on his shoulders. When they’d first met it was long, hanging halfway down his back in a thick, sun-bleached swathe over dense auburn curls. It had been the first thing she noticed, the beautiful hair. Then the shoulders. Then the butt; wrapped in black leather with easily twenty pounds of studs and buckles. Unnecessary weight in battle. Even now she smiled at the vanity. Back then it didn’t seem to matter as long as it looked good.

Shaking her head at small regrets, she silently wished for days like those days again. Days when her knees did not crack when she bent and her joints moved without complaint. Her hair had been longer then, too, and the poppy tea she sipped as she walked didn’t wreak such havoc on her gut.

“You need a haircut.” She threw a sheepskin onto the bench and sitting, adjusted it up behind her shoulder, her own small concession to the cold of the stone. He didn’t answer, didn’t even open his eyes, so she continued. “Are you going to tell me why you’re sitting here like a shipwreck, sipping dope instead of eating at the mess and getting ready for Roll Call?”

He lowered his mug to between his knees, raised his face enough to look at her straight and said, “I’m not going.”

If you would like to follow the story, click here.

And if you would like to chat about the story or the process of writing it, come along to the facebook page and have your say. It would mean agreat deal to me to hear your thoughts.

Cheers.
Lxx

ps. There are no vampires, sparkly or otherwise.
L.


Saturday, June 25, 2011

FISH-SLAPPING DANCE


Michael Rennie was there The Day the Earth Stood Still, as we know, and not Keanu Reeves. Apart from grave concerns about a mother who leaves her first born in the care of a homeless stranger, I prefer it to the remake by millions. Except that there are few commonalities to compare, really. So I watched Michael Rennie save us all from ourselves.

Watched Berserk on and off; it can run for days and weeks without pause.

Watched Evil Dead, Dead by Dawn, and Army of Darkness. I love these three movies, as terrible as they are. They’re wonderful. [I loved Hercules, TLJ, too. I used to watch Xena, but never really liked it nearly as much as Herc.]

Watched Dead Man. Just moving art, isn’t it? I love it. There are times I wish for colour, for the landscapes, but I’ll never get enough of this movie. It’s like a painting you hang on the wall for years and never tire of seeing.

Watched Reservoir Dogs, and Inglourious Basterds, and The Great Dictator.

Also watched All Quiet on the Western Front. I've never seen the 1930 original, I must. And a remake is in production for 2012. I wanted to move about after that, but ended up putting on Eric the Viking because AQotWF makes me so sad.

I will have to watch some more Python now and reaffirm the knowledge that no matter how bleak and hopeless the world looks, it is really just a big mass of total absurdity and nothing to be worried about. In any melting pot the dross floats to the top; the thick shit at the bottom gets burned; most people are blind men patting elephants and holding forth on the result; and interdependence is a dirty word when everyone is so damnably accomplished.

I have some kippers – it’s time to dance.

Meanwhile, authors out there who are looking for some coverage, Essie Holton is considering some author interviews on her review site. If you would like your indie book reviewed, and to have a chat about the hows, whys, and wherefores - here's your chance. Or go along and have a look at some of the great titles out and about that you might have missed.

Letitia had a shot at reviewing for the promise of gold but under yet another nom de plume. I think she is better sticking to babble. Reviewers need a big clap; it isn't easy. It's a role which will come to the fore more as the independence movement in digital fiction progresses. Those readers with real insight and the ability to summarize a book reliably for the wider audience will emerge with great power. All hail the powerful.

Meek, you will have to wait until you inherit the earth, I'm afraid.

I must share the terrible shock I had this week when I was forced to recall the 60s and 70s in style and decor. If any period in the history of the world should be stricken from the records, it's that decade. Well, 15-20 yrs really, but the world always hits its straps for best and worst in the 5-5 years. 1965-1975,  uggghghghhhg.

Moulded plastic furniture and shiny clothes that melted on your skin if you went too near a candle. Colours like mustard (baby poo), tangerine and burnt orange, lime green, mission brown, acid yellow. Light blue shimmer eye shadow, beehives and Osti patio frocks, white shag pile rugs, everything circles and holes and MODERN. Help, my skin is crawling away. Plastic. Plastic. Ewwww. Plastic jewellery! Plastic sofas. Bas relief matadors and geometric design curtains still lurking in forgotten caravans. MARBLECRAFT! K Tel record selector.

I need a Bex and a little lie down.

Then back to my dancing!

Lxx

Friday, June 17, 2011

R&R LOUD

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David Coverdale does Soldier of Fortune again.

Uriah Heep - Choices.

Jethro Tull - Thick as a Brick.

Steve Harley and Cockney Rebel - Sebastian.

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Sunday, June 12, 2011

MOVIES



Take a break from the world and watch some brilliance.

I have a bent against 70’s movies. They had a colour and a feel and that ridiculous quazi-realistic stammering dialogue. And gratuitous tits, of course. And excessive makeup. [And in the case of Australian movies, extremely bushy mirkins.]

That said there were some crackers made in the 70s. None of that is relevant. I just wanted to say it.

This weekend I watched:

Sunset Boulevard. Again. Yes, again! Love that movie.

The Iceman Cometh. Long. A brilliant piece and the 4 hrs goes fast because the intensity is such that you are drawn in and don’t notice how long it is taking. But….I’d cut it down a bit. lol Sacré bleu!

The Taming of the Shrew. Yes, I know.

Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? Yes, I know.

Finally watched Night of the Iguana. Thanks Dan.

Titus. Ah! And Sir Anthony looks so HAPPY on the cover.

The Cook the Thief his Wife & her Lover.  Not to be entered into lightly.

Spinal Tap! If you’re too young to have heard of Tap, the loudest rock band in history, watch this trailblazing mockumentary. And sing along: Hell Hole, Heavy Duty, Big Bottom, Stonehenge!!

EDIT: Thank you for your enquiry. None of this batch of movies was a first time watch except 'Night of the Iguana', although I only just bought 'The Iceman Cometh'and 'Night of the Iguana'.  That is very often the case. One of the benefits of senility is that with the hundreds of movies I own, I have years of viewing pleasure watching the same things repeatedly. I never tire. I don't remember the ending. Sometimes not even the middle. Or the beginning in some instances.

I think I will soon resort to sleep meds. For now, I watch movies and write words and sleep intermittently. It works.

Cheers.

Lxx

Friday, June 10, 2011

THICK PULPY [WEB]PAGES

and the heroes of our youth.

Enjoy the comi-tragic melodramas of Dan Leo or try flashing by.


Find out why the world is celebrating the life and times of Daphne Ridpath.
Click this image in the sidebar and you can start reading from the beginning.

Lxx
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Thursday, June 2, 2011

LIVE!! It’s ALIVE.

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I’m pretty sure I just plagiarized an ancient Noir quotation, but hey – that’s the nature of non-fiction.

It is all alive and kicking at 1889 Labs.

MCM said ‘Hi’ earlier and gave away gifts and prizes galore.

Terra Whiteman said ‘Hi’, too. She’s looking for bright young things to fill her Flash Fiction slots. You can mail her with your submissions.

Speaking of submissions, there is a whole page of encouragement right here.

Rushing everywhere and doing everything is AM Harte. She's reading, writing, editing, planning, scheduling, and chatting to interested and interesting writers - then probably falling in a pile on the kitchen floor and snoring – but, really, would she be happy doing anything else?

There will be seasonal series running onsite, and you have the chance to read them for FREE.   Yes, FREE.   Kicking off is Letitia’s Touchstone, and starting June 7, - WOW!!! - M Jones begins Gangster.

There are books to buy that you know and love, and the new titles from Greg X Graves and Kit Iwasaki

O…M…G… can you believe it. So much to do, so much to see. Get looking.

And don't forget the June issue of eFiction Magazine is on your shelves now. Why not subscribe.


Lxx
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