Each person is Legion : made of many people, all struggling for dominance. We writers even more so than most.
Can you see the hero, Don Quixote, or Cervantes in that legendary tale? It all depends how you look.
Life. Death. We can see both, depending if we squint or not.
Do we swallow camels, while choking on gnats?
Is the obvious truly that? Or is life more complex than we believe?
I think Angelina is beautiful, you all know that. Her humanitarian efforts on behalf of the world's children touches my Lakota spirit.
Then, I discovered Angelina Jolie hates Thanksgiving
and wants no part in rewriting history like so many other Americans.
A friend of hers says, “To celebrate what the white settlers did to the native Indians, the domination of one culture over another, just isn’t her style.
She definitely doesn’t want to teach her multi-cultural family how to celebrate a story of murder.”
According to some sources, Angelina Jolie is so disgusted by "Thanksgiving", she takes her kids out of the country so they are not around the madness that is embodied in the holiday.
Does Angelina Jolie have a point, or has she completely missed the point of having a holiday just to remind us to be grateful for the blessings in our lives? What do you think? ***
Looking back through the years, the memory flows into seasons of mist. Rolling clouds of blankness obscures the past, parting sporatically, seemingly without rhyme or reason {though Freud would dispute that} to reveal images blurred by shadows of regret, love, or yearning. But those vistas shape the inner landscape of our soul and of our mind.
Angels of lightning and storm, these memories fly from our past to sweep over our heads and under our radar to propel us along paths we only partially understand. We dream, awake, and forget. But not so our unconscious mind. It remembers, murmuring to take this road and not another. We think we choose rationally. But do we? What is illusion, what is sure in the actions we take? Doubts sleep, love burns, and fears howl. There is no refuge for the storms in our soul.
We hear in the voices of the wind the lost dreams of childhood. If we are fortunate, those voices lead us back onto the path we only thought we had lost. If we are brave, we will walk it anew with wiser heads.
All of which leads me back to those bleak Detroit winter days as my mother opened a world of wonder as I lay shivering under my blankets, the coughing from my double pneumonia growing worse and worse. I think I know why I wrote down those tales she told me, filtered through my own memories and imagination. It is my kiss to the winds to her spirit and to her love. But it could also be my desire to spin my own tales told in the darkness of the written page, to open the healing world of wonder to some other soul in the cold.
Some of my friends have asked me to put in this blog the first few pages of THE BEAR WITH TWO SHADOWS. So here are five {the first chapter} :
THE BEAR WITH TWO SHADOWS
CHAPTER ONE
THE TURQUOISE WOMAN
"Keep me away from the wisdom that does not cry, the philosophy that does not laugh, and the greatness that does not bow before children." - Kahlil Gibran.
The face of shadows gazed down upon the young bear from a bright full moon. Hers was a face that few had seen and fewer still had lived to describe. Her ghostly features were terrible and beautiful beyond any singing of them. A haunted melancholy clung to them. Like a windmill, her memory slowly turned through the fleeting lives that had been born upon her shores to walk soft across her grass like prayers only to fade away into the blood-rimmed end of the sunset.
Though it was the warming season when the geese returned, a swirl of snowflakes settled upon the wide flannel-covered shoulders of the digging bear. The long, odd shovel hesitated in his great paws. Leaning the shovel against a lonely oak tree, he wiped both paws on his worn leather pants. Sighing deep, he looked up into the face of shadows.
"Hello, GrandMother."
A warm breeze melted the snowflakes as it caressed the fur along his left cheek, whispering in the words of the wind : "I still care for you, Hibbs."
The breeze suddenly blew icy and strong, lashing a sharp oak branch across the bear’s cheek so hard that warm, bright blood oozed from a long gash. "But I have not forgiven you."
He wrinkled his nose. "Somehow I sensed that."
His voice was light, but his heart was heavy. As heavy as his steps when he turned back to the strange mahogany chest by his shovel. He thought bitterly, 'If only I could just fall back into my life and undo what I did.’
He pulled himself up straight. He couldn’t do that. Not ever. All he could do was live with what he had done with honor, compassion and courage. And a little intelligence wouldn’t hurt either.
He sank hard to his knees with a grunt. He studied the mahogany chest GrandMother had given him before the start of this journey of exile. It seemed to sing to him of long ago, of legends, and of mystery.
It was black. No, darker than mere black. It was as if all life had been leeched from one lone spot in Eternity and been shaped into the form of a rune-covered chest. He was silent as he opened the chest. No need for words, for with his dark act of kindness all words had long since lost their meaning.
Another oak branch lashed him. This time across the back and much, much harder -- as the words of winter were harsher. "Leaves! You filled my gift with leaves?"
The bear looked up into the moon’s face of shadows. "The stone coins are still there. Still in their leather bag."
His nose wrinkled. "Why are they so important to you?"
"Because they cause me bitter pain."
The tone of Grandmother’s words should have warned him, but Hibbs had never been known for thinking ahead. "Pain? But then why keep them?"
The voice grew haunted, sad. "For a remembrance of my shame."
Hibbs rocked back a bit. GrandMother felt shame? He had always thought of her as perfect and as lovely as the moonlight.
Her voice was but a murmur of the night winds. "But for me the race called Whyte would even now be roaming my green hills."
Even Hibbs was wise enough to know he must choose his next words carefully. "The face on these coins. Does it belong to the race known as Whyte?"
His words hung silent in the cold night air. The young bear had never been comfortable when GrandMother held back her answer to one of his questions. Often it meant that when the reply came, it would be accompanied by a sharp twist of his nose from invisible fingers. This time was no different. He cleared his throat in hopes of saving his nose, still tender from the last time.
"He seems to be like, but not like, the Lakota, the Apache, and the Comanche."
He cocked his massive head. "It seems so odd to speak their names here in this far-away place of exile."
Still GrandMother remained silent. Never a good sign. He sighed. He reached into the chest and pulled out the oak leaves, stopping when he saw them clear in his great paw. When he had put them in the dark chest, they had been dry and withered. Now, they were green, smelling of spring, of life.
He stood, grabbing the strange iron shovel to help him rise, for his body was heavy, even for his muscles. He waited. Still nothing. He walked slow to the small hole he had made.
Thumping to his knees with another grunt, he dropped the leaves into the fresh-turned dirt and covered them with a pat. He smiled sad. He felt like his heart would break. At that moment, the words of wind whispered.
"There are echoes of grief to your smile. Why is that?"
Still kneeling, the bear found he could no longer see clear. Hot tears stung his eyes. He made his voice work.
"These leaves are from the twisted oak atop the Pajarito Mountains of Sonora. M-My first memory of you is when you cradled me in your arms there. When -- when -- you still loved me."
The silence was a thing alive then. His wide shoulders slumped, and he leaned heavy on his large paws . The heart inside his chest felt like it was becoming cold stone like the thirty coins . His fear had been proven true. He was alone. Alone. And he would die that way, alone, unloved -- and unmourned.
His vision slowly cleared. He blinked his eyes once, twice. He couldn’t believe what he was seeing. White thigh-high moccasins. They were almost touching his paws they were so close. He felt his chin lifted up, the long fingers holding it, soft, tender. His throat closed.
Standing in front of him ... tall, regal, in her moon-white buckskin dress was GrandMother.
Estanatlehi, The Turquoise Woman, had taken form for the third time in his life.
Eternally young, framed by long hair of living lightning, hers was a face like none he had ever seen, not even on the stone coins. Not that he saw it clear, mind you. Shadows flitted across it like dark clouds across the full moon. But her turquoise eyes were clear. And wet. And so sad.
"Never. Never think that I do not love you, that I will not always love you. You are here because this whole wide world is me -- and, as always, your focus had become too narrow."
"I do not understand."
"I do not ask that you understand, only trust."
And with that, she was gone.
The bear’s face fell. "GrandMother?"
The breeze that caressed his cheek was warm. "I am still here. I came to you again that way because there are some words that just must have a face to go with them to be believed."
Suddenly, snowflakes fluttered upon him. "Now, about this guest you are housing in the cabin I built for you ...."
The heart sank within him. "You’re thinking that it is just like with Surt, I know --"
The next words were colder than even the wind which swirled the snow about him. "You know? So little, so very little. And so very much depends upon you."
"I-I’m sorry for the pain I cause you."
"Do not be sorry. Be better."
"But GrandMother. The strange creature was hurt, surrounded by -- things that would’ve killed her."
"And what if she deserved death?"
He pulled himself up tall. "I am not the measure of the world that I could make that decision. I saw a life in danger. I protected it."
The bear swallowed, then forced himself to say, "I mean to always do so."
The breeze grew warm and ruffled softly the fur of his face. "Spoken like the grandson I love. I’ll be watching, Hibbs."
And this time, Estanatlehi, The Turquoise Woman, was truly gone. Hibbs strained to hear her voice, though he knew deep down he would not. Some instinct made him stare down at his bare furry feet, and he hushed in a breath. A tiny oak sapling had grown from the spot where he had planted the leaves, taken from the tree where first he had felt loved.
*** ***
Say a prayer, friends. I've just taken my advise to Carol and overcame my jitters to send a query to Eleana Roth for HIBBS, THE BEAR WITH TWO SHADOWS. Wish me luck.
At the moment, I am listening to "Whispers In The Moonlight" by Omar Akram, a composer & pianist who encourages his audience to dream to seek the horizons that only can be seen from within. He was born in New York City while his father was representing Afghanistan at the United Nations. Check out his website : http://www.omarmusic.com/ There is magic in the music played there.
Looking back through the years, the memory flows into seasons of mist. Rolling clouds of blankness obscures the past, parting sporatically, seemingly without rhyme or reason {though Freud would dispute that} to reveal images blurred by shadows of regret, love, or yearning. But those vistas shape the inner landscape of our soul and of our mind.
Angels of lightning and storm, these memories fly from our past to sweep over our heads and under our radar to propel us along paths we only partially understand. We dream, awake, and forget. But not so our unconscious mind. It remembers, murmuring to take this road and not another. We think we choose rationally. But do we? What is illusion, what is sure in the actions we take? Doubts sleep, love burns, and fears howl. There is no refuge for the storms in our soul.
We hear in the voices of the wind the lost dreams of childhood. If we are fortunate, those voices lead us back onto the path we only thought we had lost. If we are brave, we will walk it anew with wiser heads.
All of which leads me back to those bleak Detroit winter days as my mother opened a world of wonder as I lay shivering under my blankets, the coughing from my double pneumonia growing worse and worse. I think I know why I wrote down those tales she told me, filtered through my own memories and imagination. It is my kiss to the winds to her spirit and to her love. But it could also be my desire to spin my own tales told in the darkness of the written page, to open the healing world of wonder to some other soul in the cold.
Some of my friends have asked me to put in this blog a few pages of THE BEAR WITH TWO SHADOWS. So here are five {the first chapter} :
THE BEAR WITH TWO SHADOWS
CHAPTER ONE
THE TURQUOISE WOMAN
"Keep me away from the wisdom that does not cry, the philosophy that does not laugh, and the greatness that does not bow before children." - Kahlil Gibran.
The face of shadows gazed down upon the young bear from a bright full moon. Hers was a face that few had seen and fewer still had lived to describe. Her ghostly features were terrible and beautiful beyond any singing of them. A haunted melancholy clung to them. Like a windmill, her memory slowly turned through the fleeting lives that had been born upon her shores to walk soft across her grass like prayers only to fade away into the blood-rimmed end of the sunset.
Though it was the warming season when the geese returned, a swirl of snowflakes settled upon the wide flannel-covered shoulders of the digging bear. The long, odd shovel hesitated in his great paws. Leaning the shovel against a lonely oak tree, he wiped both paws on his worn leather pants. Sighing deep, he looked up into the face of shadows.
"Hello, GrandMother."
A warm breeze melted the snowflakes as it caressed the fur along his left cheek, whispering in the words of the wind : "I still care for you, Hibbs."
The breeze suddenly blew icy and strong, lashing a sharp oak branch across the bear’s cheek so hard that warm, bright blood oozed from a long gash. "But I have not forgiven you."
He wrinkled his nose. "Somehow I sensed that."
His voice was light, but his heart was heavy. As heavy as his steps when he turned back to the strange mahogany chest by his shovel. He thought bitterly, 'If only I could just fall back into my life and undo what I did.’
He pulled himself up straight. He couldn’t do that. Not ever. All he could do was live with what he had done with honor, compassion and courage. And a little intelligence wouldn’t hurt either.
He sank hard to his knees with a grunt. He studied the mahogany chest GrandMother had given him before the start of this journey of exile. It seemed to sing to him of long ago, of legends, and of mystery.
It was black. No, darker than mere black. It was as if all life had been leeched from one lone spot in Eternity and been shaped into the form of a rune-covered chest. He was silent as he opened the chest. No need for words, for with his dark act of kindness all words had long since lost their meaning.
Another oak branch lashed him. This time across the back and much, much harder -- as the words of winter were harsher. "Leaves! You filled my gift with leaves?"
The bear looked up into the moon’s face of shadows. "The stone coins are still there. Still in their leather bag."
His nose wrinkled. "Why are they so important to you?"
"Because they cause me bitter pain."
The tone of Grandmother’s words should have warned him, but Hibbs had never been known for thinking ahead. "Pain? But then why keep them?"
The voice grew haunted, sad. "For a remembrance of my shame."
Hibbs rocked back a bit. GrandMother felt shame? He had always thought of her as perfect and as lovely as the moonlight.
Her voice was but a murmur of the night winds. "But for me the race called Whyte would even now be roaming my green hills."
Even Hibbs was wise enough to know he must choose his next words carefully. "The face on these coins. Does it belong to the race known as Whyte?"
His words hung silent in the cold night air. The young bear had never been comfortable when GrandMother held back her answer to one of his questions. Often it meant that when the reply came, it would be accompanied by a sharp twist of his nose from invisible fingers. This time was no different. He cleared his throat in hopes of saving his nose, still tender from the last time.
"He seems to be like, but not like, the Lakota, the Apache, and the Comanche."
He cocked his massive head. "It seems so odd to speak their names here in this far-away place of exile."
Still GrandMother remained silent. Never a good sign. He sighed. He reached into the chest and pulled out the oak leaves, stopping when he saw them clear in his great paw. When he had put them in the dark chest, they had been dry and withered. Now, they were green, smelling of spring, of life.
He stood, grabbing the strange iron shovel to help him rise, for his body was heavy, even for his muscles. He waited. Still nothing. He walked slow to the small hole he had made.
Thumping to his knees with another grunt, he dropped the leaves into the fresh-turned dirt and covered them with a pat. He smiled sad. He felt like his heart would break. At that moment, the words of wind whispered.
"There are echoes of grief to your smile. Why is that?"
Still kneeling, the bear found he could no longer see clear. Hot tears stung his eyes. He made his voice work.
"These leaves are from the twisted oak atop the Pajarito Mountains of Sonora. M-My first memory of you is when you cradled me in your arms there. When -- when -- you still loved me."
The silence was a thing alive then. His wide shoulders slumped, and he leaned heavy on his large paws . The heart inside his chest felt like it was becoming cold stone like the thirty coins . His fear had been proven true. He was alone. Alone. And he would die that way, alone, unloved -- and unmourned.
His vision slowly cleared. He blinked his eyes once, twice. He couldn’t believe what he was seeing. White thigh-high moccasins. They were almost touching his paws they were so close. He felt his chin lifted up, the long fingers holding it, soft, tender. His throat closed.
Standing in front of him ... tall, regal, in her moon-white buckskin dress was GrandMother.
Estanatlehi, The Turquoise Woman, had taken form for the third time in his life.
Eternally young, framed by long hair of living lightning, hers was a face like none he had ever seen, not even on the stone coins. Not that he saw it clear, mind you. Shadows flitted across it like dark clouds across the full moon. But her turquoise eyes were clear. And wet. And so sad.
"Never. Never think that I do not love you, that I will not always love you. You are here because this whole wide world is me -- and, as always, your focus had become too narrow."
"I do not understand."
"I do not ask that you understand, only trust."
And with that, she was gone.
The bear’s face fell. "GrandMother?"
The breeze that caressed his cheek was warm. "I am still here. I came to you again that way because there are some words that just must have a face to go with them to be believed."
Suddenly, snowflakes fluttered upon him. "Now, about this guest you are housing in the cabin I built for you ...."
The heart sank within him. "You’re thinking that it is just like with Surt, I know --"
The next words were colder than even the wind which swirled the snow about him. "You know? So little, so very little. And so very much depends upon you."
"I-I’m sorry for the pain I cause you."
"Do not be sorry. Be better."
"But GrandMother. The strange creature was hurt, surrounded by -- things that would’ve killed her."
"And what if she deserved death?"
He pulled himself up tall. "I am not the measure of the world that I could make that decision. I saw a life in danger. I protected it."
The bear swallowed, then forced himself to say, "I mean to always do so."
The breeze grew warm and ruffled softly the fur of his face. "Spoken like the grandson I love. I’ll be watching, Hibbs."
And this time, Estanatlehi, The Turquoise Woman, was truly gone. Hibbs strained to hear her voice, though he knew deep down he would not. Some instinct made him stare down at his bare furry feet, and he hushed in a breath. A tiny oak sapling had grown from the spot where he had planted the leaves, taken from the tree where first he had felt loved.
*** ***
At the moment, I am listening to "Whispers In The Moonlight" by Omar Akram, a composer & pianist who encourages his audience to dream to seek the horizons that only can be seen from within. He was born in New York City while his father was representing Afghanistan at the United Nations. Check out his website : http://www.omarmusic.com/ There is magic in the music played there.
Dreamer. Writer. Believer in the worth of each soul I meet.
It is not so bad a thing to have been born with the gift of laughter and the knowledge that the world is mad.
Book 4: Victor Standish risks all reality to bring back from the dead those he loves.
WOLF HOWL HAS HIS OWN BLOG!
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THE LAST SHAMAN AUDIO BOOK!
Mankind's time is nearly up. Can the last Lakota shaman save the soul of the assassin he loves before the end?
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Sometimes it is death, not life, that brings us love
A GHOSTLY WRITING MANUAL
Twain, Hemingway, Lovecraft & More!
An Age Is Ending & Ancient Evil Returning
Like PENNY DREADFUL? This is for you.
A SUPERNATURAL LONGMIRE
In Egypt, the dead never rest easy
NO ONE HEARS THE SCREAMS IN SILENT FILMS
An isolated Hollywood film crew is hunted by Nightmare
A SAMPLER OF MY HEROES
Mysteries Explained, Secrets Exposed
The Origin of Toomey Starks!
Hellhounds were never this much fun! Only $4!
VOODOO & LOVE IN THE FRENCH QUARTER
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FRENCH QUARTER NOCTURNE AUDIO BOOK!
The supernatural predators come out after Katrina. Can two undead legends stop them?
AFTER KATRINA, THERE IS NONE BUT TWO TO STOP THE UNDEAD
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LISTEN to GHOST OF A CHANCE
Can an author be drawn into his own fictional world and killed by his own characters?
HIBBS HAS FOUND HIS VOICE!
A tale of enchantment
Souls At The Crossroads
Where do you need to be?
THE DEADLIEST ENEMY IS WITHIN
What if Stephen King wrote of the life of a blood courier?
Listen to this haunting tale of horror and love
It is 1853. An undead Texas Ranger is on board a cursed ship in search of a murderer who is wearing the face of her last victim as a mask.
Listen to the LAST FAE
When the world is mad, there is little else to do but show them what true insanity is!
Can a man marry both the moon and the sun?
In the eclipse of myth, he can
What Defense is an innocent soul against the Powers of Darkness?
Let Hibbs, the cub with no clue, show you
Before Indiana Jones or Allan Quartermain
There was Sam McCord and his doomed love for Meilori Shinseen
Alice and Victor in 1834 New Orleans
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Buy_FRENCH QUARTER NOCTURNE
Hurricane Katrina has cast New Orleans into darkness. Predators, living and undead, close in on the helpless survivors. Can Samuel McCord and a vampire priest keep the French Quarter from being drowned in blood?
Buy_LET THE WIND BLOW THROUGH YOU
Enter the dangerous world of a Native American Noir thriller where forbidden love clashes with the politics of crime
You will never see the end coming
In his beginning is his end
My 1st SERIAL TRILOGY continues
There are none so lost as those who refuse to see
The 1st SERIAL TRILOGY!
In the dark, we are all orphans
In Memoriam - Maukie my cyber friend
RITES OF PASSAGE link
The earliest Samuel McCord adventure: Dare to board a fantasy Titanic as it sails into the Bermuda Triangle
VICTOR'S HERE!
BOOK 1: No one talks openly of the misty figures seen walking along New Orleans' iron-laced terraces, casting no shadow. Of the shapes seen rising from sewer grates. And no one willingly visits the crypt of Marie Laveau at midnight. Into this strange world arrives the street orphan, Victor Standish, from Charon's Greyhound. Charon has to keep up with the times ... the End Times. And the teen destined to be called the "Ulysses of the French Quarter" has come just in time for Hurricane Katrina, the End of All Things ... and the deadly love of the Victorian ghoul, Alice Wentworth.
VICTOR AND ALICE ARE BACK!
BOOK 2: Victor's a street kid. Alice is a Victorian ghoul Their love breaks the chain of reason. Their new adventures bring the French Quarter back from the brink of nightmare.
THE RIVAL
BOOK 3: Victor & Alice are in the French Quarter of 1834. Voodoo. Demigods. Revenants. And the hilarious Menage a Trois of Death! Oh, and someone we love dies at the end.
END OF DAYS is here!
St. Marrok's. The most eerie high school in which you will ever die. Its curriculum? The End of Days. Alice Wentworth plans to get an A+.
ADRIFT IN THE TIME STREAM link
SEQUEL to RITES OF PASSAGE: Come aboard the doomed DEMETER with undead Texas Ranger, Sam McCord, and sail with her into the depths of madness in ADRIFT IN THE TIME STREAM.
Buy_CREOLE KNIGHTS
SEQUEL to FRENCH QUARTER NOCTURNE: The dead rise. Elder Beings strain to enter our world through Katrina devastated New Orleans. And the Angel of Death is kidnapped to clear their way. Can Sam McCord stem the tide of madness in time?
Buy_THE LAST FAE
Once there was an age undreamed where legends walked this earth … and nightmares, too. Terrible were the battles, tragic the outcome of the wars. Until finally there were only two survivors : the nightmare and one bruised legend. These are the legend’s stories, each one a different facet of the same priceless gem – a jewel that has come to believe herself worthless. So come. Listen to her. Listen to THE LAST FAE.
GHOST OF A CHANCE
What if what you wrote became real?
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Journey with the last Lakota shaman, Wolf Howl. The white govenments call him Drew August. Those who hunt him call him Death. The last day of Man has dawned. Watch as Wolf Howl turns to meet his human hunters. Shadow, the love of his life, returns to aid his hunters. Then, Mankind's death descends. Can he save Shadow before the world's time runs out?
BRING ME THE HEAD OF McCORD!
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GHOST WRITERS IN THE SKY
LEARN TO WRITE BETTER AND LAUGH ALONG THE WAY
LAST EXIT TO BABYLON
At the dawn of the End of All Things, the Last Fae finds there is no hope ... but love.
IT'S HERE TO BUY!!
The trilogy concludes. Not even the eclipse of myth is forever. But love is. And eclipses return. Listen. The voice of Blake, son of Man, is calling across the night skies.
Buy THE PATH BACK TO DAWN
Only in the eclipse of myth can a young man find himself with both the Moon and the Sun as his brides. Can he survive what follows?
Buy_LOVE LIKE DEATH
From the pages of THE LAST FAE springs this paranormal romance/thriller. Fallen, the last fae, discovers the name of the young teenager to whom she lost her heart : Blake Adamson.But she also discovers what happens when you believe your fears over your love : heartache and loss. And so Blake Adamson finds himself torn between two loves : one fae, the other an alien drinker of souls. Their love is deadly, but love, like death, will have its way.
THE BEAR WITH 2 SHAD0WS link
Based on the stories my Lakota mother told me as a child when I was deathly ill in a freezing Detroit basement apartment. Think a Native American LORD OF THE RINGS.
FROM THE GREAT BEYOND HOP!
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ZOMBIE PREPAREDNESS!
LISTEN TO THE CDC
Thanks, Alex!
THE WORLDS OF ROLAND YEOMANS
Donna Hole astonishes with her insights on my linked worlds
FANTASTIC REVIEW OF THE LEGEND OF VICTOR STANDISH
Michael Di Gesu does a masterful review. I am honored by his friendship
LIFE LESSONS taught me by GYPSY
Dedicated to GYPSY
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One lone telepath finds himself a helpless spectator as the race of Man is subjugated into mindless drones by the very blood within their bodies.When the war is over, and he finds himself totally alone ... How can he go on and why?
CALL ME TOMBS
The last Lakota Heyoka faces voodoo and ultimate evil in the Carpathian Mountains of Transylvania with his Hellhound, Puppy
CATCH FIRE!
BLOG TOUR FOR ALEX J, CAVANAUGH'S NEWEST NOVEL
SIV'S BLOGFEST!
The Norse Gods Are Watching You!
NERDY IS THE NEW SEXY!
BECOME A JEDI KNIGHT FOR TEENS
THE SECRET OF SPRUCE KNOLL
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Written by the author who could very well turn out to be the new William Faulkner, Elliot Grace
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