The Weather Casters, Book Two: A Hole in the Sea, sequel to A
Hole in the Ice. We pick up where we left off, on the lonely ice-shelves of
the arctic seas, where the melting ice traps Parsifal, Balder, and company. It
isn’t long before the allure of the mermaids pulls them into the other-worldly
Sea, another dimension of adventure, if you will…where they meet new characters
and more deadly creatures.
Dioktes is an old sailor who endlessly wanders the
uncharted waves of the Sea. He rescues Parsifal and Balder but can they really
trust him? Fou is a poor woman who lost her mind in the nightmares of the
tossing waves, but she knows every path through the island of flotsam that
makes up the pseudo-civilization known as the Port.
Vassilissa enslaves a pirate captain and enlists
the fallen Weather Casters, Davy and Wilma Jones, both of whom have been
transformed into hideous monsters, to help her take over the Sea and destroy
the Weather Casters.
Trying to protect The Compass from all those who
would misuse It, Parsifal starts to wonder if it means too much to him, perhaps more
than his loyal friend Balder. He finds himself at a loss for what to do and where
to turn. He must rely on himself, but can he trust himself?
Coming Soon.
The tentative date is sometime in October 2015
As for the zombie
fighting:
I’m 20,000+ words into the first draft of a zombie
comedy—a ZomCom—if you will. With a little romance.
It’s about two cousins, Lyra, bent on world
domination, and Alice, who would rather not be involved with anything,
particularly marriage to an odious Earl of advanced age. There’s a spy and a
necromantic artist as well. And a vegetative Duke. And zombies, of course.
I had this idea about a girl and her father who
has the ability to influence other people’s minds. The necromantic artist
featured as well. It was kind of a steampunk Regency.
I had also written a fragment about a Regency
girl who stumbles across a young man and some secret passages in her house,
neither of which were supposed to be there, but I didn’t know where to go with
it. Then I got addicted to Plants vs. Zombies and I drew a little cartoon
inspired by the cute zombies from that game.
Except that he likes java, not brains. Anyway, Little Bird saw this cartoon and said something about hoping it meant I had an
Edwardian zombie story cooking up. I thought, hey! And before long I had those
two ideas cobbled together with zombies thrown in the mix to…um, stitch it
together.
Not sure how long this book will take to finish.
I’m almost a third through the rough draft, but it’ll take a while to revise, I
think. I hope this humor thing works out. The droll tone is hard to maintain
sometimes, and I have to be careful not to overdo it. The fun thing is, it’s meant
to be cliché. The zombies have a very limited vocabulary: uh, urr, mm, and
braaaaains! are their main words.
Anyway, I’m excited about both projects, and I’ll
probably have more. I’m considering writing a story about Sir Oaktree and his
adventures in Africa, as well.
And one of these days I'm going to try oil paints.
So stay tuned! Thanks for dropping by and don't forget to check out the Little Bird Bookstore for all kinds of amazing reads!
No comments:
Post a Comment