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The Flying Incredulo Takes Off in Apocrypha and Abstractions

Monday, 28 November 2011


Flash fiction story The Flying Incredulo leaps into the light over at Apocrypha and Abstractions today. This is a short tale of life, love and flying trapezes.


The Flying Incredulo – Greatest trapeze artist on Earth! See him soar like an eagle! — missed the grab he had made a thousand times before and cartwheeled toward the floor of the big top. A blur of red and yellow canvas spun around him. A lurching sea of upturned faces, each mouth gaping the same O.

 If you get chance, it's a free read here.

Write1Sub1 Week #47 Check-In

Sunday, 27 November 2011

Sunday is Write1Sub1 Weekly check-in day. I'm posting updates on my short fiction output here as well as over on the main Write1Sub1 blog.


Written :
  • A Mote in the Void (short story)
  • Delivered (Twitter)
  • The Accusation (Twitter) 
  • Her First Day (Twitter)
  • Pregnancy Test (Twitter) 
  • Church Clock Chimes Midnight (haiku)
  • Stargate Awaiting (haiku)
  • Atop Hoarded Gold (haiku)   
Submitted :
  • A Mote in the Void (short story)
  • Delivered (Twitter)
  • The Accusation (Twitter)
  • Her First Day (Twitter)
  • Pregnancy Test (Twitter)
  • Church Clock Chimes Midnight (haiku)
  • Stargate Awaiting (haiku)
  • Atop Hoarded Gold (haiku)
Accepted :
Published :

Scifaikuest Featured Poet

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Just had to show you this shot of my copy of Scifaikuest which arrived from the US today, complete with my name emblazoned across it :



Such a thrill when that happens. Sorry, I'll stop showing off now.

Write1Sub1 Week #46 Check-In

Sunday, 20 November 2011

Sunday is Write1Sub1 Weekly check-in day. I'm posting updates on my short fiction output here as well as over on the main Write1Sub1 blog.


Written :
  • A Desert Planet (haiku)
  • Interstellar Space (haiku)
  • Aliens Watching (haiku) 
  • Android Eyes Scanning (haiku)
  • Odyssey Over (haiku)
  • Dazzling in the Void (haiku)
  • Surface of the Sun (haiku)
  • His Last Gift to Her (haiku)
  • The Heat Death of Space (haiku)
  • Once A Thousand Years (haiku)
  • The Summoning Words (flash)
  • Can't Get The Parts (Twitter) 
  • First Step (Twitter)
  • The Great Detective (Twitter)
Submitted :
  • A Desert Planet (haiku)
  • Interstellar Space (haiku)
  • Aliens Watching (haiku)
  • Android Eyes Scanning (haiku)
  • Odyssey Over (haiku)
  • Dazzling in the Void (haiku)
  • Surface of the Sun (haiku)
  • His Last Gift to Her (haiku)
  • The Heat Death of Space (haiku)
  • Once A Thousand Years (haiku)
  • The Aliens Land (haiku)
  • The Summoning Words (flash) 
  • Can't Get The Parts (Twitter)
  • First Step (Twitter)
  • The Great Detective (Twitter)
Accepted :
Published :
  • Little

Game Writing Update: The Genehunter Files

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

So, I haven't posted anything about the game/novella deal I've been working on with Rusty Axe games for a while. Time for an update.

Actually, the arrangement has changed a bit. As you may recall, the original idea was for me to write the scenes and dialogue for a modern-day Elmore Leonardesqe thriller, along with a related novella. Rusty Axe would then write the game code, create the graphics etc. to give us a game/novella bundle. I figured that, since I've been a software developer since for ever as well as a writer, I should be able to take on this fairly technical writing task : eg. worrying about seamless dialogue in a game where the player can make free choices.

Well, you live and learn. And one thing I've learned - this may seem pretty obvious to you - is that by far the best way to create interesting, believable characters and settings is to write straight, old-fashioned stories about them first. Combining doing that with trying to design workable game mechanics just doesn't fly. A lot of effort went into trying, and what we ended up with were dull characters and clunky game mechanics.

So, back to square one. Fortunately, Rusty Axe are great people to work with : friendly, open, keen to experiment. We've decided to take a bit of a different tack. When we first discussed collaborating, I happened to show them a story I'd recently had published in Jupiter SF about a "genehunter". The set-up was a near-future, dystopian Earth where illegal cloning was commonplace and rich collectors employed genehunters to track down DNA sequences for their private "zoos".

This all suddenly seemed like a great setting for a game. I had characters, settings, technology etc. and plenty of scope for puzzle-solving and drama. So we decided to focus on this world instead.

So, the plan is for me to write the first three stories, each at about 10-12K words. These will then be published as straight Kindle downloads and, most likely, serialized at Rusty Axe too. There may also be audio versions. As well as allowing me to build up believable characters and a convincing world, this will hopefully also allow us to gauge whether there is sufficient interest in a related game. If there is, we can then work on that.

Will it work? I have absolutely no idea. But it's going to be fun finding out.

I've already written the first story - Sex, Drugs, Rock & Roll - and hope to have another two drafted by the end of the year. Then we'll see how they do out there in the big, bad world ...

So, does anyone fancy a spot of beta reading of what I've got so far? Any input would be very gratefully received. I'm obviously keen to make these stories as effective as possible, so that folks start clamouring for "the game of the book".

Well, a man can dream ...

Write1Sub1 Week #45 Check-In

Sunday, 13 November 2011

Sunday is Write1Sub1 Weekly check-in day. I'm posting updates on my short fiction output here as well as over on the main Write1Sub1 blog.

poems and stories
but also it has been a
good week for haiku

Written :
  • Christmas Decorations (flash)
  • Fireworks (poem)
  • Newborn (poem) 
  • Sharks (poem) 
  • A Different Sort of Dancing Altogether (Twitter)
  • The Summoning (Twitter)
  • The Aliens Land (haiku)
  • Aliens Invade (haiku)
  • A Lunar Crater (haiku)
  • A Snowball Planet (haiku)
  • Intergalactic (haiku)
 Submitted :
  • Christmas Decorations (flash)
  • Fireworks (poem)
  • Newborn (poem)
  • Sharks (poem)   
  • A Different Sort of Dancing Altogether (Twitter)  
  • The Summoning (Twitter)
  • The Aliens Land (haiku) 
  • Aliens Invade (haiku)
  • A Lunar Crater (haiku)
  • A Snowball Planet (haiku)
  • Intergalactic (haiku) 
Accepted :
Published :

Yay For Electric Spec, Trapeze, Mirror Dance, Scifaikuest

Friday, 11 November 2011

It's been a good week on the acceptance front for some reason. I wish I knew what I've been doing right because I'd carry on doing it ...


(Urban) Fantasy short story Haunted (boring name I know; we'll probably call it Her Pale Smile or something instead) has been bought by Electric Spec for the upcoming issue. Delighted about this one. This is my second appearance in ES, following on from SF yarn Remembrance Day last year.



Mirror Dance are going to reprint fantasy flash The Good King in their Winter 2011 edition. Regular readers may recall this story from last Christmas, when a version appeared on this blog. It's the true story of Good King Wenceslas, I tell you ...



 Following on from my appearance as Featured Poet in Scifaikuest this month, the magazine has bought five more haiku for appearance in subsequent issues. Actually, one of them is a "horrorku". Who knew there was such a thing?


And last, but by no means least, the wonderful Trapeze has accepted another fantasy Twitter tale, The Summoning.


Ah, if only every week was like this ...

Fifteen SF Haiku Published In Scifaikuest

Monday, 7 November 2011

I'm delighted - and somewhat surprised - to report that I'm the featured poet in the print edition of this month's Scifaikuest magazine. Fifteen of my SF haiku are published in issue 34 of the magazine. Definitely the most number of works I've had published in a single day ...

I confess, also, that before I discovered Scifaikuest I didn't know there was such a thing as SF haiku and and had never written any. Pleased I did now!

Here's one of the fifteen :

ten trillion trees
lash to the windblown rumour
machines from the sky


I've also got further haiku appearing in the magazine next year and in 2013.

Have you ever written haiku or one of the various similar formats? As you'll know, the point of haiku is to capture a moment of realization or enlightenment, often involving a reference to nature or the seasons. I find they're a wonderful thing to "write" when I'm not writing - when I'm out walking, driving, whatever. Why not give them a go? They can be strangely compulsive ...

Write1Sub1 Week #44 Check-In

Sunday, 6 November 2011

Sunday is Write1Sub1 Weekly check-in day. I'm posting updates on my short fiction output here as well as over on the main Write1Sub1 blog.

A busy week on the submissions front, for some reason ...

Written :
  • Corvus the Mighty (short story)
  • The Day They Switched The Machine On (flash)
  • Scarecrows (flash) 
  • Lemonic Possession (Twitter)
  • The Second Apocalypse (Twitter) 
  • Saved! (Twitter)
  • Lines of Defence (Twitter)
  • Repeats (Twitter)
  • bare feet in the snow (haiku)
  • tending his garden (haiku)
  • clanging (haiku) 
 Submitted :
  • Corvus the Mighty (short story)
  • The Day They Switched The Machine On (flash)
  • Scarecrows (flash) 
  • Lemonic Possession (Twitter)
  • The Second Apocalypse (Twitter)
  • Saved! (Twitter)
  • Lines of Defence (Twitter)
  • Repeats (Twitter)
  • bare feet in the snow (haiku)
  • tending his garden (haiku)
  • clanging (haiku)
Accepted :
  • Human Statue (Twitter) to be reprinted in the 140 and Counting anthology
  • The Second Apocalypse (Twitter) by Trapeze.
Published :
  • The One Thousand, One Hundred and Eleven Gates to Faerie
    by Kaleidotrope

The One Thousand, One Hundred and Eleven Gates to Faerie Published by Kaleidotrope

Wednesday, 2 November 2011


Kaleidotrope is a magazine for people who "dig Martians, robots, and people with melting heads" I mean, what's not to like?

Delighted to report that my (urban?) fantasy story The One Thousand, One Hundred and Eleven Gates to Faerie has been published over there in Issue #13. This is a bittersweet tale of love, loss and Faerie. Plus it has a nice bit of swearing in it.



He struck a match. It was then that he saw it. It was lying on the ground next to the bins amid squashed tomatoes and the bones of fish. He thought it was just some toy at first. There was blood though. One of its wings was gone, trodden into the mud. Something, a rat maybe, had been chewing at its side. It was dressed in stained white armour, a half-moon symbol on its chest. The other fairy he had seen had been beautiful, all moonlight and ice. This one was a mess.






PS. It's obviously NaNoWriMo just now. I'm not taking part, but I'd like to take my hat off to those of you who are. I mean, I don't actually have a hat, but if I did, I'd take it off to you ...