June Bugs

May didn’t go well, in spite of a reasonably good start. Too much going on beyond my control.

Status

The Wizards Cat
I’ve started word sprints again. They’re one of the best tools I have for getting things flowing. Mostly in fits and starts but it’s more start than fit. Fingers crossed for the rest of the month

Everything Else
Still virtually frozen in storage. I have no idea what project I’ll take on after this Cat starts prowling, but everything will be on the table again.

What Am I Reading?

I stumbled on some early Michael Chatfield a couple of weeks ago. His Emerilia series whet my appetite for litRPG after getting started with Matt Dinniman’s Dominion of Blades. I’ve been through a couple of his other litRPG series but finding an early space opera made my month.

The Recruitment Rise of the Free Fleet, book 1 of the Free Fleet series, starts when Earth gets invaded by alien slavers, capturing our hero, James Cook and his merry band of top tier video gamers on the cusp of their championship game. The story and universe unfolds, step by step, as Cook and his fellow slaves become trained up as cannon fodder for their captors, a group calling themselves the Planetary Defense Force.

This series is straight up Big Guns and Bigger Ships military/space opera in a sprawling universe. Much war. Many set backs. Ships cracked, broken, boarded, and exploded.

If you can handle the warfare, you might like this series as much as I do.

Maybe grab a sample and see what you think.

A large, blocky space ship looking battered and beaten on flies toward the viewer. A blue planet looms in the background while a small fighter-style ship zooms toward the mothership

About the Newsletter
I’m still publishing it on the 15th of the month. You don’t need to subscribe to get a mid-month update from me. You can find them archived on my newsletter’s public page at Kit.

Looking Forward

Slow progress is still progress. I keep looking for that spark that has me fighting to get back to the keyboard and push the story ahead. So far, each spark has fizzled. I’m still writing something every day. Sometimes not much more than a few hundred words but they count. The word sprints show improvement, albeit irregular, but I’ll take it.

I’m my own biggest obstacle these days, but with some help from my friends and the support of people like you, I think there might still be a chance I can finish this book before I kick the bucket.

Fingers crossed.

Until next month, safe voyage.

-N

Come What May

I’m getting the mojo back. It’s a slow process but it is a process and it’s working.

Status

The Wizards Cat
The story grows a little bit almost every day. I’m still looking for the spark that turns my little candle into a bonfire but the fact that I’ve kept it growing most of the month keeps me coming back to it.

Everything Else
All the long form fiction stuff – more science fiction, more fantasy, different formats (notably the audiobooks for Tanyth), are all on hiatus. Virtually frozen in storage against the time when I can think about them again. Not my wish, but a simple recognition that I’ve gotten very limited in my ability to process multiple projects with any kind of reliability.

What Am I Reading?

I ripped through Eric Ugland’s “The Good Guys” series. Fifteen volumes in a couple of weeks. LitRPG and highly recommended but that niche is an acquired taste that many of you don’t share.

More pertinent, I also read the first three volumes of J J Green’s Space Colony One series. I picked them up as a virtual boxed set and plowed through them in about 4 days. The story concerns what happens when a generational starship finally makes landfall on a habitable planet after six generations in space, the successes and failures. Balancing on a genetic knife edge as they struggle to maintain a viable gene pool.

It starts very slow. Some of the characters get little more than a sketch. A couple are as cardboard as Leon Rosset. It’s slow enough I was tempted to DNF, but I’m glad I went through to the end of volume 3, and not just because I’m cheap and already owned it.

I felt like Green’s storytelling picked up as the series continued. The plot’s careful weaving in the first book became more engaging the deeper I got into the story. Ethan and Cariad, the two main characters, took on more depth. I became more invested in the story as I went along and will be going back to pick up volumes 4-6 when I get a chance.

But don’t take my word for it. I’d suggest you grab a sample but the box set is free as of this writing. Maybe check it out for yourself.

A 3-d representation of the three books in the series appear as if bound in a green box. The front of the box shows a space ship zooming toward the viewer.

About the Newsletter
I’m still publishing it on the 15th of the month. You don’t need to subscribe to get a mid-month update from me. You can find them archived on my newsletter’s public page at Kit.

Looking Forward

I know I say this every month but the story really is coming along. I’m closing in on the halfway mark, finally. I’m not sure how the story ends, but I have a feel for where it’s going and how it might get there. I just need the energy to get it done.

Perhaps more important, I’m feeling better than I have in, well, years. I’m still not 100%. Maybe this is my new 100%, I don’t know. I’m more optimistic about this story than I have been in a while. All I can do is keep plugging away.

Eventually, it’ll get there and we can all move on to something else.

Until next month, safe voyage.

-N

So. April?

Yeah. March did not go as planned. The 40 Mile March turned into … something else.

But it’s spring and hope springs eternal.

Status

The Wizard’s Cat (Book 2 of the Wizard’s Butler)
I didn’t realize that so many people didn’t make the connection between the Cat and the Butler. The book itself needs the last few quarters of the story filled out. A weasely way to say I’ve got a long way to go but I know where I think it might end up. Execution, as always, is the problem.

Everything Else
Nothing else has happened. If it’s not Cat, it’s not happening. I have not abandoned Ishmael or Tanyth or anything. I’ve got some thoughts about where all those characters might go. I’m making a concentrated effort to put my limited brain cells on the Cat.

What Am I Reading?

I finished off the existing volumes of Stephan Morse’s Continue Online series and Nobody103’s Mother of Learning (a 4 volume series at the moment). Lately, I’ve been zipping through Darynda Jones’s Betwixt and Between series. I’m up to book 4 in just a few days. They’re just so much fun, my reading has been on the upswing after the February doldrums.

The basic set up for this midlife magic tale involves a set of chosen ones – women, naturally – whose powers get passed down through the generations from legendary roots. In the first three books, our plucky heroine – aptly named Defiance Dayne – in the aftermath of a marriage gone horribly wrong, inherits a historic Salem manse with a dark past from a woman she’s never heard of.

Secrets abound. Snarky dialog sparks up the pages and kept me smiling as I read. In book 4 the sidekick becomes the main character but the secrets, and the snark, continue. I’m about halfway through and already looking for the next book.

Content warning: There are some steamy bits. Lots of lusty thoughts but a few paragraphs that might not be exactly safe for work.

But don’t take my word for it. Maybe grab a sample of book 1 and see for yourself.

Seriously, Continue Online and Mother of Learning took up all my reading time last month. Some mitigating circumstances? I read only half as much (according to the Kindle app on my phone) for the first three weeks of the month. I blame Enshrouded.

About the Newsletter
I’m still publishing it on the 15th of the month. They’re not all getting delivered but you don’t
need to subscribe to get a mid-month update from me. You can find them archived on my newsletter’s public page.

Looking Forward

A few people have suggested that I put the Cat aside and write something less fraught. I have to admit I’ve considered it more than once but I just can’t gin up any excitement knowing that this story needs to get finished. While some of that impetus comes from knowing so many of you are waiting for it (and have been, literally, for years at this point), most of it comes from me. I need to see this story through for my own sake.

I’m having to relearn so much after The Troubles in 2022. How to eat. How to sleep. How to deal with, well, everything since I didn’t actually die but thought for a good portion of the year I might.

As I told somebody when I was working on editing the Marva Collins series, which I roughed out before I got sick, the story hadn’t changed, but I had.

I’m still – even after all this time – still working through those changes. I’m honestly convinced it will be worth the effort.

And the wait.

Until next month, safe voyage.

N