My first novel-length work to hit publication is now available from Torquere Books.
This calls for an excerpt. Why look. Here’s one now.
My first novel-length work to hit publication is now available from Torquere Books.
This calls for an excerpt. Why look. Here’s one now.
You know, I thought I published this two days ago, but maybe I didn’t. Given the spelling, it’s just as well.
I’ve been focused on the problem of evil and how it would fit into the universe of project I’m working on.
If you don’t know your way around theology, be sure to go read up on the problem of evil, natch.
So I have a world with two populations, each with an internally consistant cosmology that completely conflicts with the other.
Population A has a cosmology familiar from earth, namely qualified monism. God created the world. The agent responsible for evil in the world is a son or other emanation of god. God has other emanations rather like angels from more familiar contexts, but here would be considered lesser gods, servants of the Great God, who humans address with their prayers and consider responsible for giving laws. The nature of evil for this part of the world is disobeying the laws laid down by God’s servants.
Population B has believed that the universe is not unique (though there are arguments about whether other universes are equal to their home one or are lesser shadows. Gods are local phenomena of a universe. They aren’t taken as lawgivers and such, just immensely powerful beings on the top rank of things that can be summoned and bargained with. The bottom rank would be occupied by strong and weak elemental entities. For the B guys evil is not something that has to do with gods. Evil is the measurable ill effects of a spell cast with unkind intention, or the residue of a spell cast by evil means (like cutting out peoples’ hearts or the like). Evil is to be avoided, largely because it is unpredictable and leads to misery, no matter what initial benefit accrues. Good mages strive to clean up evil, while evil mages make use of it.
I wonder how much of this I could fit into a book without boring people?
The NYT has an essay on sex in mainstream novels from Updike to David Foster Wallace with interesting twists of observation. I can imagine my high-school senior English teacher getting a kick out of it.
Hi all. Or as “all” as my readership gets.
Today I have a free one for you folks. My story Waiting for a Train is available on Fishnet, a wonderful source of free smut on the interwebz.
Lately I’ve been reading Raymond Chandler. His work is exciting and well-written, with prose that is often more fun than the meaning, like a present where you can entertain yourself for half an hour with the ribbon and the wrapping paper before you even get to the contents. He’s been an inspiration for many scifi/fantasy authors, and (important for a person with little money and less shelf space) you can find lots of it in the library.
A lot of stuff I’m ‘supposed’ to like has been disappointing, especially erotica. In some cases I end up feeling like I’m a better writer than 99% of the folks writing erotica. It’s nice to go swim in a pool that’s big enough that my fiction is nothing but a modestly interesting backwater and whereever I swim I have plenty to learn.
However, it’s only a matter of time before I run out of Chandler.
So where should I go swim next?
“In MEMORIAL GARDEN, Lauren Burka has created a world of decadence ruled by an empress who values her own pleasure far above the lives of her consorts. Full of erotic and ironic twists and turns, this story creates a tapestry of sensual surprises and forbidden pleasures.”
NYT best selling author Rebecca York