according to mags blogspot

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

niedziela, 16 stycznia 2011

The Four Writings I'm Most Proud Of

Posted on 06:41 by summy
Decided to list the four completed works I've written that I'm the most proud of, in order of pride. Here goes, with spoilers contained therein...

The Skirmish at the Vale's Edge (BattleTech)

When I visited DragonCon in 2008, I found a booth for Catalyst Game Labs, the company that current produces the BattleTech game and licensed fiction, and figured this would be a good writing opportunity. However, I let the project sit by the wayside while I worked on other projects until spring/summer 2009. I decided then that I ought to have the story done by DragonCon 2009, so I could find the Catalyst people again and tell them I'd submitted something.

I purchased some BattleTech source-books online and went to work. I remember watching the BattleTech animated series when I was in elementary school (it was on UPN on Sunday mornings, before church), so I remembered the Clans. Given how new writers are encouraged to start out far away from the important characters from the books and games, I figured the Clan invasion of the Periphery was a good place to set a story.

The Clan Wolf conquest of Drask's Den reminded me a lot of the 1991 Persian Gulf War, which I'd researched extensively for my Gates of Vasharia project, so I went to work. I like to think my future biographers will have a field day with all the inside jokes--there's a city on Drask's Den named Carrollton, after the town where The Griffin Daily News is printed, while the protagonist shares a surname with my coworker at the Griffin paper.

I finished the story over the summer of 2009 and ran it through my Kennesaw and Lawrenceville writing groups twice and ended up submitting it to BattleCorps, the online BattleTech fiction compendium, a few days before DragonCon. After some tinkering, it went up on http://www.battlecorps.com/ in early October 2009. Since it's an older story, it can probably be purchased for $2.00 or so.

Four cents per word is not considered a "pro rate" (that's $0.05/word plus), so I can't count this toward membership in the Science Fiction Writers of America. However, it still came out very lucrative for me and I intend to write more. The protagonist proved to be very popular with the BattleCorps denizens, so I think we'll be seeing him again.

Best of all, my story is now considered BattleTech canon.  For those of you who need some clarification, that means it is now considered as valid as any of the source-books, gaming manuals, or novels as far as the history of the BattleTech fictional universe is concerned.  I've made a mark, albeit a small one, on one of the biggest gaming franchises out there.

Lord of the Werewolves (Harry Potter fan-fiction)

Although this is fan-fiction and therefore I cannot make any money on it (unlike my original story, "I am the Wendigo," which we'll discuss later), I do like this one. But before I describe why, some background.

In 2008, I wrote a novel-length Harry Potter fan-fic entitled "The Wrath of the Half-Blood Prince," which took place during the First War of the Dark Lord (in the timeline, the 1970s) and was about Snape.  More on that later.

In order to get ideas and share my own thoughts, I joined the FictionAlley web-site.  While I was there, I made the acquaintance of Kyli Ann Rasco, who was an active poster in the threads critical of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. I did not agree with all criticisms of the last book, but one of the better arguments was that Lupin and Tonks were underused. All they did was get married, have a baby, and die (offscreen, no less), and Lupin acted like a total tool when he learned that Tonks was pregnant. Both of them could have done so much more--Tonks, a shape-shifter, could have been a hard-core Order of the Phoenix assassin, while Lupin, a werewolf, could have challenged the terrorist Fenrir Greyback for control of Britain's werewolf community.

Kyli and I started corresponding and so "Lord of the Werewolves" was born. We both came up with ideas, I wrote the chapters, and then sent them to Kyli for revision and approval.

I'm proud of this for several reasons. Firstly, it's probably one of the most character-centric things I've ever written.

Remus Lupin starts out the story the way he is in canon--a nice guy who doesn't have a lot of moral courage (werewolves are treated similarly to how those with AIDS were treated in the 1980s and he was so glad to have friends that he never stood up to them, even when they did bad things like bully the nerdy young Snape). However, there is a dark, violent side to his character (we see hints of it in the earlier books) that is unleashed when Tonks, injured in a battle with her mad aunt Bellatrix Lestrange, is denied medical treatment by prejudiced doctors and miscarries. After killing the two Healers, Lupin is forced to kneel before Fenrir Greyback to escape the vengeance of the wizarding legal system, now under the control of the Dark Lord.

Once he's realized how thoroughly he's screwed up, he begins planning something resembling Operation Valkyrie (the plot to overthrow Hitler)--he'll assassinate Fenrir Greyback, blame the Death Eaters, and turn the werewolves against the Dark Lord. In the meantime, as a rising star in Greyback's outfit, he becomes more assertive and aggressive, or as one of my readers described him, "darker and edgier." As another reader said, he ultimately "finds his backbone" and is able to stand up to both the Forces of Evil and the often-prejudiced Forces of Good.

I did not put as much thought into Tonks' characterization, but it's there. She starts out her usual spunky self, ends up in a very dark place as a result of her miscarriage and her husband's apparent abandonment, and pulls herself back together. She ends up using FiendFyre as a weapon of assassination, and is back to normal by the end of the story.

I also got to indulge my penchant for making truly awful puns. Here's a selection from a chapter taking place on Valentine's Day...

"Oh Merlin," Tonks said from underneath him. "Professor Lupin, I didn't think you still had it in you."

Lupin smiled.

"Well, you could say I was just hungry like the wolf."

Tonks giggled. That warmed Lupin's heart. He decided to keep the jokes rolling.


"Who knew Miss Tonks liked it on all fours?"

She laughed. "I admit, not my usual cup of tea. But damn."

"So nice, we did it twice."

Tonks laughed again.

The "hungry like the wolf" pun provoked much groaning from those who heard it. This selection also reflects character development on Lupin's part--in a chapter taking place during their honeymoon, it's Tonks who is the sexually-dominant one (due to being younger and much more energetic). However, in this one, some months after kneeling and swearing allegiance to Greyback, Lupin has shown himself much more willing to take charge, so to speak.

Here's the story, for those who want to read it:

http://www.fanfiction.net/s/4764695/1/Lord_of_the_Werewolves

I am the Wendigo (original)

I wrote this one when I was a senior at the University of Georgia. In December 2006, I sold it to the webzine Chimaera Serials and it went up in January of 2007. I was ultimately paid $20 for it, which is somewhere between $0.01 and $0.02 per word.

Chimaera Serials died later in 2007 and the web-site ultimately went down within the last year. Somebody has posted it on an Internet forum and let it sit there for years as a free "calling card" to give out to people. I had to take it down in order to self-publish it on Amazon and it's available here.

I think "I am the Wendigo" is probably the scariest thing I've ever written. I think that's something to be proud of.

The Wrath of the Half-Blood Prince (Harry Potter fan-fiction)

I started writing this one after reading Sindie's "The Moment It Began," which I found via some fan-art on DeviantArt.com. It started out as a one-shot in which the Death-Eater-to-be Mulciber attacks Lily, not Mary Macdonald (as was the case in the canon timeline), and Severus Snape unleashes the titular wrath. However, there were enough people who wanted more that I continued the story, to the point that when finished (it took all of 2008 to write), it was longer than the first three or four Harry Potter books combined.

One reason I'm proud of this is how popular it is. It's gotten over 250,000 hits, it's been included in over 40 fanfiction.net collections, and hundreds of fanfiction.net users have included it in their "favorite stories" list. This means there are hundreds if not thousands of people who will remember my name when, someday, they see my original novels for sale.

It's also my first finished novel and showed me how to avoid letting projects fall by the wayside--I had a large number of fans who read, wrote reviews, and were expecting more. When you have people waiting for your next chapter, it provides an extra push to write it. I've put this principle to good use with my original fiction, using my two writing groups.

Although character growth and development was not my original concern when writing the story, there was enough of it that one member of FictionAlley pointed it out, in a most unexpected place--the Marauders!

For the record, I don't like the Marauders. I think they were a bunch of thugs, with James Potter in particular being the Gryffindor equivalent of Draco Malfoy. Only Lupin gets any sympathy because he was less involved with their bad behavior and went along with it because he was desperate to have friends, not because he was truly a bully or sadist.

However, this member of FA (whose user-name I cannot remember) said I did a really good job depicting the transformation of the Marauders "from bullies into men of character." I believe Rowling's intent was to depict James as having abandoned his cruel ways as a youth to become a heroic fighter against Evil and although this isn't portrayed very well in the books, I figured I ought to include it in the story.

Of course, at one point in their school days, Snape gives him a good working-over with Sectumsempra in a midnight-mugging-gone-wrong.... :)

I did give Snape a character-arc too. He starts out as being concerned only about Lily and his own position in Slytherin (in that order) and his initial breach with the Death-Eaters-to-be was, like his canon break, the former taking precedence over the latter.

Once away from the bad influence of his evil friends, he slowly detoxes from their selfish and racist ways and, seeing his abusive Muggle father's treatment of his witch mother, firmly represses any controlling attitudes he has toward Lily (although he immediately backs down when she calls him on "I won't let you..." in the books, that attitude is still there). He ultimately grows to the point he protects James from Arnold Trigg, whom he had taught Dark Arts and who had gone progressively insane as a result of his fiancee's death at the hands of the Death Eaters.

Lily gets a character-arc too. In a snippet in Deathly Hallows, when she criticizes Snape for what Mulciber did to Mary, she focuses on the fact it was "Dark Magic" more than what Mulciber actually did. The events of the war push her to be more flexible and less moralistic. After all, I could argue aggression using "Light Magic" (James' bullying of Snape, seen in flashback in Harry Potter And The Order Of The Phoenix) is worse than self-defense using Dark Magic (Snape's retaliation using Sectumsempra).

I also tried to make Tobias Snape, Snape's abusive Muggle father, into a more complex character. Rather than making him an alcoholic vagrant, as is often done in Snape stories, I depicted him as a war veteran (the Suez Crisis and the Malayan Emergency, which would have taken place when he was a young man) self-medicating his Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder with alcohol and as a mill-worker whose livelihood is disappearing as British mills lose market share to cheaper foreign producers. He's also on some level insecure and frightened of his wife's supernatural powers, which explains why, when he's been drinking, he berates her and puts her down. He also has a secret love for musical theater.

(He's still a colossal jerk and I admit I teared up writing a scene depicting him drinking and ranting--it was that depressing.)

Here's the link if you want to read it:

http://www.fanfiction.net/s/4026081/1/The_Wrath_of_the_Half_Blood_Prince
Wyślij pocztą e-mailWrzuć na blogaUdostępnij w XUdostępnij w usłudze Facebook
Posted in BattleTech, books, culture, DragonCon, fan fiction, fantasy, fiction, Harry Potter, horror, Internet, J.K. Rowling, publishing, science fiction, sex, Skirmish at the Vale's Edge, women, writing | No comments
Nowszy post Starszy post Strona główna

0 komentarze:

Prześlij komentarz

Subskrybuj: Komentarze do posta (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Creepy Similes and Metaphors: A Way To Build Atmosphere
    Right now, I'm reading Writing Horror  edited by Mort Castle (I think it's an older edition of a book I already own) and I've re...
  • Hugh Thompson: A Belated Memorial Day Post
    This is David Rovics' "Song for Hugh Thompson." Hugh Thompson was a warrant officer in the Vietnam War who interrupted the M...
  • The First Draft of "Battle for the Wastelands" Is Done
    I took last Friday off in order to have a three-day weekend for writing, as was once suggested by my immediate superior at the Griffin Daily...
  • My First Podcast Interview...
    After lunch Wednesday, my friend Nick interviewed me for his Dudeletter podcast.  Apparently I'm the third audio interview he's reco...
  • Dogsland Is Your City: A Guest Post By J.M. McDermott
    Dogsland Is Your City I'd like to thank Matthew Quinn for letting me stop by and borrow his blog for a day. It's very nice of him. A...
  • The Story Is As The Story Does: A Guest Post By James R. Tuck
    I am a big believer in writing a story till it's complete. Not every story is a novel, no matter how much you want to stretch that idea ...
  • Reconsidering My Andrew Patel Stories...
    Earlier today I wrote a blog post that referenced how my supervillain protagonist tales "Ubermensch" and "Needs Must" ...
  • Book Review: "Earth Unaware: The First Formic War" (NO SPOILERS)
    Just got done reading Earth Unaware: The First Formic War, the prequel to Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston. Here goe...
  • "World War Z" First Look Footage
    Here's a clip I just found online. Entertainment Tonight will be having a "first look" at Brad Pitt's upcoming adaptation ...
  • Thoughts on "Lord of the Rings"...If Written By George R.R. Martin
    On my message-board, someone asked what The Lord of the Rings would be like if it were written by George R.R. Martin, he of the complicated...

Categories

  • 300
  • 300: Rise of an Empire
  • 50 Shades of Grey
  • A Hymn Before Battle
  • A Song of Ice and Fire
  • A.A. Milne
  • Abdullah al-Kidd
  • abortion
  • abortion alternative
  • abortion alternatives
  • advertising
  • Afghanistan
  • Africa
  • African-Americans
  • agriculture
  • airport
  • al-Jazeera
  • Alabama
  • Alan Stout
  • alcohol
  • Alex Claw
  • Alex Hughes
  • Alexander II
  • Alexander the Great
  • Alfred Hitchcock
  • Alice Eve
  • Alien
  • alien invasion
  • aliens
  • alternate history
  • alternative energy
  • Amazon.com
  • AnachroCon
  • Anakin Skywalker
  • Andrew Patel
  • animal rights
  • animals
  • animation
  • Anita Pointer
  • Annabel Joseph
  • Anne Hathaway
  • antibiotics
  • Antoine Dodson
  • Appen Newsapers
  • Appen Newspapers
  • Arab Spring
  • Arabs
  • Arcturus Mengsk
  • Arizona
  • art
  • Arya Stark
  • Asajj Ventress
  • At The Mountains of Madness
  • Athens
  • Atlanta
  • Atlanta Incursion
  • Augusta
  • Aurora
  • Australia
  • Austria
  • autism
  • Avatar
  • Avengers
  • Ayn Rand
  • bacteriophage
  • Bane
  • banking
  • Barack Obama
  • basketball
  • Batgirl
  • Batman
  • Batman Maybe
  • Battle for the Wastelands
  • Battle: Los Angeles
  • Battleship
  • Battlestar Galactica
  • BattleTech
  • Bed Intruder
  • Bella
  • Benedict Cumberbatch
  • Beowulf
  • Bernard Cornwell
  • Bilbo Baggins
  • Bill Clinton
  • Bill Watterson
  • Billy Ray Cyrus
  • biological weapons
  • Biologist's Saint Patrick's Day Song
  • Birds of Prey
  • Bite Me: A Love Story
  • bizarro fiction
  • BJs
  • Black Widow
  • blackmail
  • Blizzcon
  • blogging
  • Blood and Bullets
  • Blood and Silver
  • Bobby Jindal
  • Boneshaker
  • books
  • border security
  • Boxing Day
  • Boy Scouts
  • Boy Scouts of America
  • BP
  • Brad Pitt
  • Brazil
  • Brian Mitchell
  • Brooklyn Decker
  • Bruno Lombardi
  • Buckhead Church
  • budget
  • Bukharin
  • Bulgaria
  • bullseye
  • business
  • Byzantine Empire
  • California
  • Calvin and Hobbes
  • Calvinism
  • Camelot
  • Canada
  • cancer
  • Captain America
  • Captain Planet
  • CareerBuilder
  • Carl Sagan
  • Carlo Ludovico Cordasco
  • Carol Marie Underwood
  • Carolyn Maloney
  • cartoons
  • Casey Cagle
  • Cassy Herkelman
  • cat
  • Catelyn Stark
  • Catholicism
  • Catwoman
  • Center for Puppetry Arts
  • Central Bucks School District
  • Chaos Space Marines
  • Chaosium
  • charity
  • Charles Stross
  • Charles Wilson
  • Cherie Priest
  • children
  • China
  • Chris Hemsworth
  • Christi anity
  • Christian Nation
  • Christianity
  • Christie Golden
  • Christmas
  • Christopher Moore
  • Christopher Nuttall
  • Chuck Hogan
  • Civil War
  • Clay Griffith
  • Clean
  • Cleveland
  • Coachella Valley High School
  • Cobb County
  • Coil Gun
  • Cold War
  • Colorado
  • Comanche
  • comedy
  • comics
  • Communism
  • complementarianism
  • computers
  • Conan
  • Conan The Barbarian
  • Confederate States of America
  • conflict minerals
  • Congo
  • Congress
  • conservatism
  • cooking
  • Corpus Christi
  • CostCo
  • costuming
  • Covenant Care Adoption Services
  • crime
  • Crimea
  • crowdfunding
  • Crusades
  • Cuba
  • culture
  • cyberpunk
  • Daily Finance
  • Dan Wells
  • Danaerys Targaryen
  • Daniel Goleman
  • Danielle De Luca
  • Dark of the Moon
  • Dark Shadows
  • Dark Tower
  • Darren Morfitt
  • Darth Vader
  • dating
  • David Brin
  • David Drake
  • David Hartley
  • David Lynch
  • David Rovics
  • Dean Devlin
  • Dean Koontz
  • Deathly Hallows
  • Deathly Hallows Part One
  • Deathly Hallows Part Two
  • Deidre Knight
  • Delilah S. Dawson
  • Democratic Party
  • Destroyermen
  • DeviantArt
  • Devon Monk
  • Dexter
  • Dick Cheney
  • Dies the Fire
  • dieselpunk
  • Digital Science Fiction
  • dinosaurs
  • disease
  • Disney
  • distributism
  • divorce
  • Doctor Who
  • Dog Soldiers
  • Dolbeau-Mistassini
  • Don Bluth
  • Donald Trump
  • DragonCon
  • dragons
  • Dragonslayer
  • Draka
  • Draw Mohammed Day
  • drugs
  • Dudeletter
  • Earl Thomas Conley
  • Earth Unaware
  • Eastern Orthodoxy
  • economics
  • Eddard Stark
  • Edgar Rice Burroughs
  • education
  • Edward
  • Egypt
  • election
  • elections
  • Eli Banks
  • Elizabeth Smart
  • Elle Fanning
  • Ellen Datlow
  • Elrond
  • Emberverse
  • Emilio Estevez
  • Emory University
  • employment
  • Ender's Game
  • energy
  • England
  • environment
  • Eric Flint
  • Eric Johnson
  • Escape from the Wastelands
  • espionage
  • ethanol
  • eugenics
  • Eurasian Union
  • Europe
  • European Union
  • Eva Green
  • Everburn
  • evolution
  • exercise
  • F. Paul Wilson
  • Facebook
  • family
  • fan art
  • fan fiction
  • Fanbolt
  • fantasy
  • Fareed Zakaria
  • farm subsidies
  • feminism
  • fiction
  • Fidel Castro
  • film
  • Firefox
  • fish
  • Five Spot Yogurt
  • Flashing Steel Flashing Fire
  • Florida
  • Focus on the Family
  • food
  • fossils
  • Fox Brothers Bar-B-Q
  • France
  • Frank Miller
  • Free Blog Hit Counter
  • free trade
  • freedom
  • Freedom and Justice Party
  • friends
  • frozen yogurt
  • FX
  • Gabrielle Giffords
  • Galadriel
  • Game of Thrones
  • Games Workshop
  • gaming
  • Gandalf
  • Gary Goldman
  • Gary Johnson
  • Gary Mitchell
  • Gates of Vasharia
  • Geauga County
  • genetic engineering
  • geography
  • George Lucas
  • George R.R. Martin
  • George Scithers
  • George W. Bush
  • Georgia
  • Georgia Perimeter College
  • Georgia State University
  • Germany
  • ghetto
  • Globus
  • Godzilla
  • Gordon Van Gelder
  • Gotham
  • government
  • Graham Garrison
  • Grand Admiral Thrawn
  • Great Britain
  • Greece
  • Green Party
  • Greyfriar
  • Griffin Daily News
  • Guillermo del Toro
  • gun control
  • gun rights
  • guns
  • Gwinnett County
  • H.G. Wells
  • H.R. 452
  • Half.com
  • Halloween
  • Hands Off This Girl
  • Harry Potter
  • Hastily Made Cleveland Tourism Video
  • Hawkeye
  • health
  • Heart of the Swarm
  • Helen Ukpabio
  • Herman Cain
  • Heroic Fantasy Quarterly
  • Hiero's Journey
  • Hispanics
  • history
  • Hitler
  • Hmong
  • hockey
  • holidays
  • Homeland Security
  • homeschooling
  • horror
  • Hostess
  • Hugh Thompson
  • human trafficking
  • humor
  • Hunger Games
  • Huntress
  • I Am Not a Serial Killer
  • I am the Wendigo
  • Illegal Alien
  • illegal immigration
  • immigration
  • Imperial Guard
  • In The Living Years
  • India
  • Internet
  • Internet Explorer
  • internet gambling
  • Iowa
  • Iran
  • Iraq
  • Iron Man
  • Iron Man III
  • Iron Sky
  • Isaac Marion
  • Islam
  • Island 731
  • Island in the Sea of Time
  • Israel
  • Italy
  • J.H. Glaze
  • J.J. Abrams
  • J.K. Rowling
  • J.M. McDermott
  • J.R.R. Tolkien
  • Jaime Lannister
  • James Byron Huggins
  • James Kirk
  • James Madison
  • James Michener
  • James Tuck
  • Janice Hardy
  • Japan
  • Jared Lee Loughner
  • Jason Momoa
  • Jasper Kent
  • Jean-Luc Picard
  • Jeepers Creepers
  • Jeff Baker
  • Jeffrey Stepakoff
  • Jeremy Robinson
  • Jesus
  • Jill Stein
  • Jim Raynor
  • jobs
  • Joe Scarborough
  • Joel Courtney
  • Joel Northrup
  • John Ashcroft
  • John Calvin
  • John Carter
  • John Connolly
  • John F Kennedy
  • John Joseph Adams
  • John Monds
  • John Piper
  • John Pistole
  • John Ringo
  • John Scalzi
  • John Stossel
  • Johnny Depp
  • Johns Creek Herald
  • Joker
  • Jon Huntsman
  • Joseph Nassi
  • Joshua Harris
  • Joshua Kadison
  • journalism
  • Journey to the Center of the Earth
  • Judaism
  • Julian Assange
  • Julius Caesar
  • Jurassic Park
  • Justin Timberlake
  • Karen Handel
  • Katherine Mankiller
  • Kathryn Janeway
  • Katie Holmes
  • Katy Perry
  • Kaylana Price
  • Kellie Jureka
  • Kerensky
  • Kevin McKidd
  • Khan Noonien Singh
  • Kickstarter
  • kidnapping
  • Killian Aldrich
  • King Arthur
  • King David: A Biography
  • King Raven
  • Kiss The Limit Productions
  • Koran
  • Korea
  • Korean War
  • Kornilov
  • Kristen Stewart
  • labor
  • lake
  • Law and Order
  • Law and Order: Special Victims Unit
  • law enforcement
  • Legend of the Guardians
  • Liam Cunningham
  • Liam Neeson
  • libel
  • libel tourism
  • liberalism
  • Libertarianism
  • libraries
  • Libya
  • lionfish
  • literature
  • litigation
  • Littlefinger
  • locum
  • Lord of the Rings
  • Los Angeles
  • Lost in Space
  • Lost Legion
  • Lovecraft
  • Luke Skywalker
  • Machiavelli
  • magic
  • Malissa Thomas
  • Mandarin
  • Marco Rubio
  • Margaret Weis
  • Maria Pitillo
  • marijuana
  • Marla McGivers
  • marriage
  • MARTA
  • Mary Robinette Kowal
  • Mass Effect
  • Matt McQuinn
  • Matthew Broderick
  • McCarthyism
  • medicine
  • Megan Fox
  • Melon Heads
  • mental health
  • Mexico
  • Michael A. Stackpole
  • Michael Bay
  • Michael Bloomberg
  • Michael Coker
  • Mighty Ducks
  • Mike and the Mechanics
  • Mike Huckabee
  • Mike Lee
  • military
  • minimum wage
  • Miskatonic University
  • Mitch Daniels
  • Mitt Romney
  • Mohammed
  • Molly Norris
  • money
  • monsters
  • Mormonism
  • Mortal Kombat
  • Mount Bethel United Methodist Church
  • Mountain West
  • Mr. Monster
  • Ms. Marvel
  • music
  • Myopia: Defend Your Childhood
  • NAACP
  • Napoleon III
  • Natalie Monroe
  • Natalie Portman
  • Nathan Deal
  • National Novel Writing Month
  • National Rifle Association
  • Native Americans
  • NATO
  • Nazism
  • Neal Boortz
  • Ned Stark
  • Needs Must
  • Netflix
  • New Hampshire
  • New Pulp
  • New York City
  • Newt Gingrich
  • Nick Fury
  • Nicor
  • Nietzsche
  • Nintendo
  • Norcross
  • North Avenue Presbyterian Church
  • North Korea
  • Nova
  • nuclear weapons
  • Obama
  • Occupy Wall Street
  • Ohio
  • Ohio University
  • Oracle
  • Orks
  • Orson Scott Card
  • Ottoman Empire
  • Pacific Ocean
  • Pacific Rim
  • paganism
  • Pakistan
  • Paladin of Shadows
  • Palin
  • Patriot Act
  • Paul
  • Paul Zindel
  • peace
  • Pennsylvania
  • Pepper Potts
  • Persia
  • Persian Gulf War
  • Pete Seeger
  • Peter Benchley
  • pets
  • Phantoms
  • Phil Cobb
  • Picking Up Plans In Palma
  • pigs
  • piracy
  • Pixar
  • podcasting
  • poetry
  • politics
  • ponerology
  • Pope John Paul II
  • Postcards from LA
  • Predator
  • Predators
  • prejudice
  • PrettySouthern
  • pro-choice
  • pro-life
  • Prometheus
  • Protestantism
  • Protoss
  • pseudoscience
  • psychiatry
  • psychology
  • publishing
  • pulp
  • Quebec
  • racism
  • radio
  • Ramsay Bolton
  • Ray McBerry
  • recycling
  • Red Tails
  • release date
  • religion
  • Renly Baratheon
  • Republican Party
  • restaurants
  • Revenge of the Fallen
  • review
  • reviews
  • Revivalist Party
  • Rick Perry
  • Rick Santorum
  • Rickon Stark
  • Rihanna
  • Robb Stark
  • Robert Baratheon
  • Robert Bunch
  • Robert E. Howard
  • Robert Heinlein
  • Robert McCammon
  • Roland Emmerich
  • Roman Empire
  • Rome
  • Ron Howard
  • Ron Paul
  • Roose Bolton
  • Roswell
  • Roy Barnes
  • Russell Brand
  • Russia
  • S.M. Stirling
  • Sabaton
  • Saladin Ahmed
  • Sandy Springs
  • Sansa Stark
  • Santa's Boot Camp
  • Sarah Kerrigan
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Sauron
  • science
  • science fiction
  • Scientology
  • Scotland
  • Sean Pertwee
  • sex
  • sex trafficking
  • Shandra McDonald
  • Shane Black
  • Sharpe
  • Sicily
  • Singapore
  • Skirmish at the Vale's Edge
  • Skyline
  • Smashwords
  • Smaug
  • Snellville
  • Snow White
  • socialism
  • software
  • Sokullu Mehmed Pasha
  • Solomon Kane
  • Son of Grendel
  • Sonny Perdue
  • South Africa
  • South Korea
  • Sovereign Grace
  • Soviet Union
  • space colonization
  • space exploration
  • space opera
  • Space Wolves
  • Space: Above and Beyond
  • Spain
  • Sparta
  • Spawn
  • speech
  • sports
  • St. Patrick's Day
  • Stalin
  • Stannis Baratheon
  • Star Trek
  • Star Trek Into Darkness
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation
  • Star Wars
  • Starcraft
  • Starcraft 2
  • Stargate
  • Starship Troopers
  • Starship Troopers: Invasion
  • Starz
  • steampunk
  • Stellan Skarsgard
  • Stephanie Meyer
  • Stephen King
  • Stephen Lawhead
  • Sterling E. Lanier
  • Steve Alten
  • Steven Spielberg
  • Super Eight
  • Super Mario Brothers
  • superheroes
  • supervillains
  • Susan Griffith
  • Sweden
  • Talia al-Ghul
  • Tangled
  • taxation
  • Taylor Anderson
  • Taylor Kitsch
  • Tea Party
  • Tears of the Sun
  • technology
  • Ted Turner
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
  • television
  • terrorism
  • Texas
  • thankful tree
  • Thanksgiving
  • The Almanacs
  • The Beast of the Bosporus
  • The Current Plus
  • The Cybele Incident
  • The Dark Knight Rises
  • The Empire's Corps
  • The General
  • The God of the Wet Wood
  • The Handmaid's Tale
  • The Hobbit
  • The Land Before Time
  • The Lonely Island
  • The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction
  • The Secret of NIMH
  • The Strain
  • The Thing in the Woods
  • The War of 2512
  • theater
  • Theon Greyjoy
  • Thomas Herman
  • Thor
  • Thorin Oakenshield
  • Thousand Sons
  • Thunder on the Battlefield
  • Tibet
  • Tim Burton
  • Timothy Zahn
  • Titan A.E.
  • Tom Cruise
  • Tom Hardy
  • Tom Hiddleston
  • Tomorrow When The War Began
  • Tony Stark
  • Too Many Times
  • Top Gear
  • Toronto Raptors
  • traffic
  • trailer
  • Transformers
  • transit
  • Transportation Security Administration
  • travel
  • troubleshooting
  • TSA
  • Tugg.com
  • Tuskegee Airmen
  • TVTropes
  • Twelve
  • Twilight
  • Twitter
  • Tychus Findlay
  • Tyranids
  • Tyrion Lannister
  • Tywin Lannister
  • U.S. Marine Corps
  • U.S. Navy
  • Ubermensch
  • Ukraine
  • Ultramarines
  • United States
  • University of Georgia
  • University of Idaho
  • Utah
  • Valerian Mengsk
  • vampires
  • Venice
  • Victoria Moon
  • video
  • Vidkun Quisling
  • Vietnam
  • Vikings
  • Vimeo
  • virtue
  • Voting Rights Act
  • Walton High School
  • war
  • War of 2020
  • War of the Worlds
  • Warhammer
  • Warhammer 40000
  • Warm Bodies
  • weird
  • Weird Tales
  • werewolves
  • Western
  • Whitley Strieber
  • Wicca
  • Wicked As They Come
  • Wikileaks
  • Wikipedia
  • William Blum
  • William Dietz
  • William King
  • William Meikle
  • wind
  • Winnie the Pooh
  • witness
  • women
  • Worf
  • World War I
  • World War II
  • World War Z
  • worldbuilding
  • wrestling
  • writing
  • Writing Excuses
  • X-Files
  • YouTube
  • Zerg
  • zombies

Blog Archive

  • ►  2014 (59)
    • ►  lipca (13)
    • ►  czerwca (6)
    • ►  maja (6)
    • ►  kwietnia (7)
    • ►  marca (9)
    • ►  lutego (8)
    • ►  stycznia (10)
  • ►  2013 (95)
    • ►  grudnia (5)
    • ►  listopada (5)
    • ►  października (5)
    • ►  września (3)
    • ►  sierpnia (6)
    • ►  lipca (8)
    • ►  czerwca (9)
    • ►  maja (13)
    • ►  kwietnia (10)
    • ►  marca (9)
    • ►  lutego (11)
    • ►  stycznia (11)
  • ►  2012 (123)
    • ►  grudnia (9)
    • ►  listopada (19)
    • ►  października (12)
    • ►  września (4)
    • ►  sierpnia (12)
    • ►  lipca (10)
    • ►  czerwca (6)
    • ►  maja (13)
    • ►  kwietnia (4)
    • ►  marca (14)
    • ►  lutego (12)
    • ►  stycznia (8)
  • ▼  2011 (140)
    • ►  grudnia (11)
    • ►  listopada (10)
    • ►  października (6)
    • ►  września (8)
    • ►  sierpnia (7)
    • ►  lipca (19)
    • ►  czerwca (12)
    • ►  maja (11)
    • ►  kwietnia (12)
    • ►  marca (22)
    • ►  lutego (9)
    • ▼  stycznia (13)
      • In Support of the Egyptian Protesters...
      • My Two Alternate Draka Timelines and Machiavelli
      • Productivity Update: Jan. 23, 2011
      • Anne Hathaway as Catwoman, Tom Hardy as Bane, in "...
      • Another Piece of Interesting Fan-Fiction
      • The Four Writings I'm Most Proud Of
      • Some More Thoughts on "Camelot"
      • Starz's New Arthurian Drama: "Camelot"
      • Another "Battle: Los Angeles" Trailer
      • More Tuscon Shooting Aftershocks...
      • Political Hay-Making Attempts from the Tucson Shoo...
      • Egyptian Muslims Serve as "Human Shields" for Copt...
      • First News Article Round-Up of 2011
  • ►  2010 (83)
    • ►  grudnia (14)
    • ►  listopada (17)
    • ►  października (11)
    • ►  września (13)
    • ►  sierpnia (12)
    • ►  lipca (16)
Obsługiwane przez usługę Blogger.

O mnie

summy
Wyświetl mój pełny profil