Showing posts with label Jim Beard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jim Beard. Show all posts

Sunday, March 17, 2019

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING MARCH 16, 2019

THIS AND THAT

Today is not only Saint Patrick's Day 🍀, it is also Saint Gertude's Day, the Patron Saint of Cats. 🐱
Whichever one you celebrate, please party responsibly.

My thanks to everyone who might have voted in the 2019 Pulp Factory Awards, but before you ask, I won't know who won until the results are made public. Like I said, I know several of the contenders and am keeping my fingers crossed for my friends, so we're just have to wait and see how it turns out.

Am working on a new Sherlock Holmes adventure for Airship 27 right now, but that project's still in the early stages.
I know basically what course the tale will take, but I don't even have a title for it right now.

Also have a couple of other ideas I am considering, but prefer to work on nothing without a specific deadline at the moment while I wait to hear if Jim Beard needs anything else from me concerning either "Zephyr Lily" or the 1970s anthology in general.

In any event, I better get back to writing now.
See you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
17 March, 2019

Sunday, March 3, 2019

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING MARCH 2, 2019

CELEBRATE!
ZEPHYR LILY IS IN JIM BEARD'S HANDS NOW AS PART OF HIS UPCOMING 1970s ANTHOLOGY PROJECT!

I sweated over every word and punctuation mark in that tale, finishing close to 9,700 out of a 10,000 word limit and feel it's some of my best work to date.

Now, don't get me wrong.
I try to do my human best on EVERYTHING, but this one was near and dear to my heart, being based in the period when I was growing up and first discovered comic books.
I've previously mentioned both my love of the comic book genre and my wish that I could be a writer of them too, but this is about as close as (unfortunately) I'm gonna get for the foreseeable future.
While a straight prose story (no images), "Hunter/Prey" harkens back to the early days of Len Wein's Swamp Thing, Marv Wolfman's Tomb of Dracula, Sheldon Mayer's Black Orchid, and much more.

I hope I don't get whiplash as I "time travel" from the 1970s back to the far flung future to finish going over HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE, BOOK 3: FEMME FATALE next.
Unfortunately, I haven't gotten very far into that as I post this, so that will probably be most (if not all) of this week, especially since I'll be taking Tuesday off to celebrate my birthday!


So take care everyone, and I'll see you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
3 March, 2019

Sunday, February 17, 2019

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 16, 2019

Okay, got some work done reviewing my friendly neighborhood beta-proofreader's notes concerning HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE, BOOK 3: FEMME FATALE; but I am DEFINITELY going back to start my second pass on "Zephyr Lily" for Jim Beard's 1970s anthology this week.

Tried looking for an appropriate image, but no one has yet to draw the character, the word ZEPHYR either gets me classic cars or dirigibles, and there's too many flowers to sort through for LILY, although I do like this one of a Stargazer, probably so named because of the spotted interior.

Anyway, besides being a writer in general, it has always been a lifelong dream of mine to write for a comic book company.
I leaned towards DC until they started having CRISES and reboots on a regular basis, and while there are some Marvel Comics characters I like, they've hopped on the reboot bandwagon too in recent years, so I'm not completely sure where either company is continuity wise right now.

Unfortunately, the closest I've ever come to achieving this dream is getting involved with start ups that never seem to make it past the "Wouldn't it be nice if...?" stage of existence.😔
Hence everything I've ever wrote or done for them editing wise is just sitting in a computer file gathering electronic "dust", especially since I'm uncertain of the legalities concerning who actually owns what.😢

But I still have HUGH and ALPHA, along with THE REBEL I created for Jaime Ramos' SINGULARITY-RISE OF THE POST HUMANS anthology. Would love to get back to her whenever the opportunity presents itself sir!
And now I have with ZEPHYR LILY a new, mysterious champion to add to my roster!😁

So I better get back to writing/editing.
See you around the Internet!
Lee Houston, Junior
17 February, 2019

all links were active at the time this progress report was posted.

Sunday, February 3, 2019

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 2, 2019

At just a little over 7,000+ words (out of a 10,000 maximum limit), I'm still working on my Zephyr Lily story for Jim Beard's upcoming 1970s anthology.

Now, for those who came in late, I love the comic book medium.
Always have, and probably always will, despite how dang expensive the darn things are getting nowadays.
When I first started reading, and I do stress the R word here, they were only 20 CENTS for 20 pages of story and art per issue. A lot of titles featured a COMPLETE lead story AND a second feature for that price!
But nowadays...

Enough reminiscing, for now.
Got a busy week ahead of me, including a dentist appointment on Tuesday.
Hopefully I'll get more done, let alone approach writing THE END to my current project, but that remains to be seen.

In any event, I better get back to it now.
See you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
3 February, 2019

Sunday, January 27, 2019

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING JANUARY 26, 2019

FINISHED my review of Nancy Hansen's next fantasy novel!
Good reading, and her fans should not only get excited over this book when it's eventually released, but be prepared for a shock when they come across that one surprise plot twist I talked to you about last week.

I AM working on my "Zephyr Lily" story for Jim Beard's upcoming 1970s anthology now.
Am at almost 6500 words (of 10,000 maximum) and the tale is reading like a prose adventure from some of the great comics that debuted in the decade of disco, Star Wars, and the bicentennial.

I may not be a prolific writer when it comes to overall output, but man, the quality of these assembled words has to be some of my best work yet!

In any event, I better get back to writing now.
See you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
27 January, 2019

Sunday, January 20, 2019

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING JANUARY 19, 2019

At this point, I'm less than 30 pages away from finishing going over my friendly neighborhood beta-
proofreader's latest fantasy novel and I must say that it is not only one hell of a read, but that there was a plot twist about halfway through that I did NOT expect!

In the fairness of full disclosure, Nancy Hansen is my friend and we trade our various manuscripts back and forth between each other all the time for reviews and opinions, but still...

Once this is completed, finishing ZEPHYR LILY for Jim Beard will be the next stop on my Winter 2019 agenda as I try to stay warm, but I also have to go out on 3 different occasions this coming week, so how things actually turn out remains to be seen.

In any event, I better get back to work now.
Take care, and I'll see you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
20 January, 2019

Sunday, January 13, 2019

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING JANUARY 12, 2019

Still wearing my editor's hat as I go over my friendly neighborhood beta-proofreader's latest fantasy novel manuscript while she reviews what will be HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE, BOOK 3: FEMME FATALE.

Won't spoil any of the details for you but, even though I'm only about halfway through it at the moment, this IS a tightly written book and a fast paced adventure.
I truly think Nancy Hansen's long time readers and any fantasy fan alike will enjoy this novel when it's eventually published.

But inbetween giving this manuscript back to Nancy and reviewing her thoughts on HUGH to finalize that novel for submission to the publisher, I WILL be fast-forwarding to the 1970s to finish "Zephyr Lily" for Jim Beard first.

So with that thought in mind, I better get back to work now.
Take care, and I'll see you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
13 January, 2019

Saturday, January 5, 2019

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING JANUARY 5, 2019

WOW!
Can you believe that this is the first Progress Report for 2019???

Editor's Hat
Anyway, I'm starting out the year wearing my Editor's Hat as I review my friendly neighborhood beta-proofreader's latest fantasy novel while she reviews HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE, BOOK 3: FEMME FATALE.

Whenever I finish that, I have to complete the "Zephyr Lily" story for Jim Beard's 1970s super hero anthology project before I go back over Hugh myself.

When Hugh is completely finished I will send it on to the publisher and then (probably) begin work on whatever becomes the third novel in the PROJECT ALPHA superhero series.

All this while taking care of housework and other life necessities!

In any event, I better get back to it, so take care and I'll see you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
6 January, 2019


Sunday, November 18, 2018

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING NOVEMBER 17, 2018

First and foremost everybody:

Now then, my friendly neighborhood beta-proofreader has decided that between the impending holiday and needing to finish going over what will be the fifth novel in her Jezebel Johnston series before submitting it to Airship 27, that the two of us will not be trading files until after the first of December at the earliest.

I will still be going over her latest fantasy novel while she reviews HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE, BOOK 3: FEMME FATALE, just not when I originally thought.

So what have I been doing?
WRITING.
Duh!

At the moment, I am backtracking to finish my Zephyr Lily story for Jim Beard's 1970s comics homage anthology, because that has been green lighted again! 😁

Then I will be racking up the frequent time traveling miles between a few other projects I want to get underway, including another Sherlock Holmes adventure.
So while all of this might be a whole lot easier if I had my own TARDIS😉, I certainly won't be idle, despite the fact that I will be taking Thursday off.

In any event, take care, and I'll see you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
18 November, 2018

All links were active at the time this Progress Report was posted.

Sunday, July 30, 2017

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING JULY 29, 2017

I was literally all over the place this past week whenever I had writing time.
In the far flung future with HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE.
In the 1970s working on my story for Jim Beard, and at {{undisclosed locations}} working on that new idea I've previously mentioned that just won't leave me alone.

It's great to have so many projects, considering variety is supposed to be the spice of life, but at some point I know I've got to knuckle down and start completing these things, considering what I want to accomplish in the future.

Have errands Monday and Friday along with a doctor's appointment Thursday. Otherwise, writing is the big thing on my agenda for this week.

Take care, and I'll see you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
30 July, 2017

Sunday, July 23, 2017

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING JULY 22, 2017

IT'S STILL A QUESTION OF QUALITY OVER QUANTITY

Once again I spent the past writing week in the 1970s, working on my story for Jim Beard's project; when I wasn't trying to flesh out a new idea that has been running through my mind for some time now and wouldn't leave me alone until I did.

There are times when I wish I was a more proficient writer, at least from a quantity perspective, because there is so much I want to do just within the immediate future.

*Finish my 1970s story.
*Proofread the other contributor's 1970s stories as they are submitted.
*Finish what will become HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE, BOOK 3 for Pro Se Press.
*Finish the short story I promised Nancy Hansen so long ago.
*Create another Sherlock Holmes, Consulting Detective story for Ron Fortier at Airship 27. The first one I wrote is (tentatively) scheduled for Volume 11 of that series, with Volume 9 being the latest release as I post this progress report.
*At least begin what will become PROJECT ALPHA, BOOK 3 before the end of this year.
*Eventually start work on the book that will feature the new idea mentioned above.
*And so much more.

Thankfully, only the 1970s project has any true deadline(s), which is why I'm concentrating on that first. While it might goeth before a fall, I take great pride in the fact that I have never missed a deadline, and I don't intend to start now.

I know that there are only so many hours in a day.
One must rest, eat, do household chores, honor other life commitments, keep doctor's appointments, and so much more.
Just this coming week, there are errands Monday and Friday, with Tuesday probably a lost cause on the writing front.

I do try to write every day, and when I'm "in the zone", it's a marvelous feeling.
The words and thoughts are coming faster than my hands can type, and I have never been a great typist to begin with.😉
But how many words are recorded at the end of a writing session, let alone how many stay after I proofread any specific passage varies.

It's the age old battle. "Quantity versus Quality".
Do you want it done fast or do you want it done right?
In the end, I will always choose quality over quantity, because I want my creative endeavors to be the best I can make them.
It may sound selfish, but in the long run, I not only want my writing to be enjoyed and loved by its readers and fans, but I also would like to see my stories live on long after I have shuffled off this mortal coil to whatever lies hidden beyond the veil.

So, if I'm going to accomplish that goal, I better get back to writing now.
Take care.
Lee Houston, Junior
23 July, 2017

Sunday, July 16, 2017

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING JULY 15, 2017

ON WRITING AND DOCTOR WHO

Wish the subtitle of this Progress Report meant I was asked to write a Doctor Who story but alas, one cannot have everything in life.

Anyway, I spent the past week working on my 1970s story for Jim Beard's upcoming anthology project, since that assignment has an actual deadline. The end of September.
Broke the 5,000 word mark, which is the half way point for submissions.
Whether or not I'll have it finished before the end of the month remains to be seen, but definitely going back to HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE soon.

The Internet is abuzz today (July 16th) with the British Broadcasting Company's announcement that ACTRESS Jodie Whitaker will be the next person to portray the title role in their long running series Doctor Who.
In all honestly, I was totally flabbergasted when I first heard this.
I have absolutely nothing against women.
I have nothing against the idea of female Time Lords. After all, we've had at least 2 Romanas and the Rani in prominent roles during the course of the series. Granted, The Mistress has been an interesting character, but I'm still having some difficulty believing that the Master and the Mistress are two different (re)generation sides of the same person.
Yet to cast an actress in the title role goes against 50+ years of established continuity in my humble opinion.
I know ♫the times they are a changin',♫ to quote Bob Dylan.
And I'm all for women in more prominent, heroic roles whenever possible.
But this...???
I honestly don't know.
How would the public react if an until now well established female character was suddenly recast as a man?
I sincerely hope you see the point I am trying to make here, dear reader.
Doing this could be the greatest thing to come along since oxygen, or by the end of Whitaker's first season, the BBC could find themselves in a real mess.
Only time will tell, and all we can do for now is wait and see.

In any event, I'm going back to writing now.
Lee Houston, Junior
16 July, 2017

Sunday, July 9, 2017

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING JULY 8, 2017

My Editor's Hat
Wore my "Editor's Hat" for quite a while this past week.

First I went over the second submission for the 1970s anthology I'm co-editing with Jim Beard, like I said I would last week.
Then I got to go over the galley of an anthology that will have a story I co-wrote as one of its offerings.

After that, I resumed work on what will eventually be the third book in the HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE series.

Now, considering that the 1970s anthology has a solid end of September deadline, I'll probably go back to work this coming week on my contribution to it.
Then again, I already know that because of life commitments, there are two days ahead of me this week that I will be unable to get as much writing done as I would normally hope to accomplish, so we'll just have to see how things go.

In other words, I'll just have to take it one day at a time like I normally do.
Better get back to writing now.
See you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
9 July, 2017

Sunday, July 2, 2017

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING JULY 1, 2017

Definitely got a lot more done this past week than the few previous weeks combined.

Made some good progress on HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE, BOOK 3!

Got to pause for a bit this week and put on my editing hat to read the next short story submission for Jim Beard's 1970s anthology that I'm co-editing, when I'm not working on either my own tale for that project or Hugh.

In any event, have a great week everybody!
Happy 4th of July to those celebrating, and I'll see you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
2 July, 2017

Sunday, June 4, 2017

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING JUNE 3, 2017

Spent a lovely week in the 1970s.
Reviewed the first story submitted for the pending anthology set in that decade before forwarding my notes on to Jazzy Jim Beard, then spent time working on my own story for the collection.
At the moment, I'm honestly not sure what I'll be doing this week yet, because there are a few life commitments I have to honor plus a major medical appointment I have to keep Tuesday.
Otherwise, I'll definitely be writing as much as I can, whenever I can.

See you around the Internet!
Lee Houston, Junior
4 June, 2017

Sunday, April 30, 2017

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING APRIL 29, 2016

My esteemed colleague and friendly neighborhood beta/proofreader Nancy Hansen spent most of her free time this past week working on her own material, since she will be going back for the surgery on her right eye this coming Thursday as I type this post.
HOWEVER... she did take the time out of her busy schedule to proofread Chapter 6 to my current efforts on HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE.
Having just gotten this back yesterday, I certainly will be going over her notes before I resume work on Chapter 7 and wish her well with her impending surgery.
For her fans out there, Nancy has told me she is seeing better out of the left eye now than she has in years, and cannot wait for the right eye to be corrected.


For those interested, Jim Beard has gathered quite a list of talents to work on his 1970s project.
All concepts and plots have been submitted and approved between him and yours truly, so now it's just a question of waiting until the contributors start sending in their completed stories and going over them as they arrive.
And as for what I am bringing to the table? Besides my good looks and creative editorial skills that is.
Okay, a tease below.

Where no one else dares travel walks the beautiful but deadly…

Hey. I did say it was a tease!
In any event, take care and I'll see you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
30 April, 2017

Sunday, April 2, 2017

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING APRIL 1, 2017

Mixed week folks.

On one hand, almost got Chapter 6 to the current HUGH MONN, PRIVATE DETECTIVE story (book?) I'm working on done, after going back over Chapter 5 from my friendly neighborhood beta/proofreader.
Then unfortunately I lost a couple of days between needing to attend to some other matters and the fact I was without Internet service for over 24 hours, which kept me from doing research when I needed to.

Hopefully, I'll get back on track this week, especially considering...

Jim Beard has asked me to join him once again co-editing and contributing to his latest superhero homage!

Fans who remember the Super Swingin' Hero 1968 Special should start saving their hard earned money for the forthcoming sequel volume as we enter the 1970s!

Even if everything wasn't still in the early planning stages at this point, I can't say more than I already have at the moment, because I certainly don't want to let any cats out of their bags prematurely.

Then again, considering we'll be dealing with the 1970s this time, I wonder if an analogy concerning ducks and discos would be more appropriate?

And for those wondering what I'm talking about...

Take care, and I'll see you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
2 April, 2017

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

BACK STORY: SUPER SWINGIN' HERO 1968 SPECIAL

For me, a lot of 2015 was spent in 1968 helping Jim Beard make his dream project a reality.
So I thought it was about time (no pun intended) to get feedback from the other contributors on the Super Swingin' Hero 1968 Special from Mechanoid Press, a homage to that way out publishing period in the late 1960s where companies were trying anything and everything to attract readers.

Everyone was asked the same three questions.
01. If you ever read or still do read comic books, what was your very first one?
02. What are your thoughts on the late Silver Age of comics?
03. How did you become involved with the anthology and come up with the story for your specific feature?

DAVID MICHELINIE
Author of so many great comics of the past.

My very first comic was probably around 1956, either one of DC's second tier heroes (Green Lantern, Hawkman, The Flash, etc) a Disney duck book, or Classics Illustrated.
I became hooked on comics in the latter part of the 1950s and they informed my character development very strongly. It was an era when heroes were good and villains were bad, which was not exactly a true representation of the real world. But it showed the world as it could be, as it should be, and that was enough to light a spark of hope in my malleable and somewhat naive little kid mind. It's probably why I seem to add at least some sort of positive element in even the darkest stories I write.
Lee contacted me through Facebook and asked if I'd be interested in participating. I said, "Sure". As for the story, there were only two slots left when I joined: Ghostman (homage to Deadman) and The Crawler (homage to The Creeper). To be honest, I'd never read either of those characters when they were published, so I went through a few back issues and decided that Deadman would be the easiest--er, I mean, most interesting to use as a template. I took key elements from the original and came up with a storyline that would fit and pitched it. Unfortunately, I was told that I'd stuck too close to the copyrighted material and the editors would prefer, quite reasonably, to avoid a massive lawsuit. So I sat back and re-thought things, coming up with alternatives that, I have to admit, actually made the story better. I re-pitched, got approval, and wrote what I hope became an entertaining story with a bit of heart, a couple of laughs, and a recognizable background of the 1960s.

LISA M. COLLINS
Author of things both fiction and culinary.

My dad introduced me to comic books when I was around six, with my first being an Archie.
I think I fell right into one of the new demographics comic publishers were trying to break into. I was young and female. I was also deeply interested in science and the Silver Age comics was loaded with it, and whet my appetite for more.
As a member of the Pulp Factory yahoo group, I saw a post by Jim calling for proposals about the project. I batted some ideas his way about adapting a story loosely based off of Dial H for HERO, a DC Comics about a mysterious dial that turns a kid into a superhero by selecting the letters H-E-R-O in order. I personally have an affinity for all things Egyptian, and reworked the idea by selecting a pantheon of ancient Egyptian gods who would imbue my character, Jane Roberts, with mystical powers by wearing a necklace of rotating beads spelling out god's name.

ERWIN K. ROBERTS
Creator of The Voice, and other exciting adventures.

At age three or four I started trying to figure out the newspaper Sunday comics. The key word being tried. The first comic book I remember is when my grandmother read to me “Only a Poor Old Man” from my sister’s copy of Uncle Scrooge #1. I collected U.S. comics from the mid-1950’s thru the early 1990’s. I still buy an occasional independent comic.
The late 1960’s were my college years. Just remember that no comics shops existed then. Things went crazy on the newsstands. TH.U.N.D.E.R. Agents and Tower Comics came and went. So did Gil Kane’s graphic (in more ways than one) novel His Name is -Savage! Anybody remember Fatman - the Human Flying Saucer? Marvel had an explosion. Meanwhile DC just went nuts. And I loved most of it. For me the Silver Age of comics began when I bought The (Barry Allen) Flash #105. It began to end in 1985 with Crisis on Infinite Earths and DC releasing Frank Miller’s Legends of the Dark Knight. Since that time all the contrived EVENTS and the steady stream of creators and editors aping Miller with ever darker characters took all the fun out of comics for me. I see DC and Marvel comics these days and cringe. The art and the blurbs just scream, "You don’t want to read this."
I saw Jim Beard’s call on the Pulp Factory mailing list, but hesitated a bit before replying. The list of characters was a bit picked over by then. I tend to write lone wolf heroes, in preference to groups. Only one solo character remained: Changeor - the Mutable Man. In 1968 able bodied Americans males, eighteen and older, had to be seriously concerned with getting Drafted. Changeor took his Draft physical almost exactly one year before I did. We both had the same sort of high-handed Draft Board. There is more than a little of my own experiences in this story. It is just that I can’t change my shape and composition like he can.

Okay folks, considering that there was 10 fantastic features within the Super Swingin' Hero 1968 Special and we've only heard from 3 authors in this post, obviously this article is TO BE CONTINUED, but the anthology can be found at Amazon.com!

Monday, December 21, 2015

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT: SUPER SWINGIN' HERO 1968 SPECIAL NOW AVAILABLE!

From Mechanoid Press, cover by Scott McCullar

Okay folks, I didn't find out about this until earlier, but here's a ray of sunshine to brighten your day!
The Super Swingin' Hero 1968 Special has just been released for the Kindle by Mechanoid Press, with the print version soon to follow.

This anthology was a labor of love over most of the Spring as I helped Jazzy Jim Beard assemble an all star cast of authors to create some of the most outlandish send-ups in all of comicdom in one kooky collection of heroes straight from the flip side.

Thrill to the afterlife adventures of Ghostman by comics legend David Michelinie!
Hang out with Beauty and the Beetle as they solve a mystery of Lovecraftian proportions by Sam Gafford!
Witness The Coming of Changeor by Erwin K. Roberts!
Discover how The Crawler Creeps with Chuck Miller.
Do you dare go adventuring with Fate's Four and Thomas Deja?
Soar with The Peregrine and the Pigeon with Bonnie J. Sterling as your co-pilot.
What enigmatic mystery has Mark Halegua created for the robot detectives of Automation Investigations, Inc.?
Will Hathor's Gift be of any H.E.L.P.? Only Lisa Collins knows.

And finally, your kooky co-editors get into the act!
Jim presents the latest adventure of The Go-Go Gears and I reveal the outrageous origin of The Substandard Quintet!

The sky’s the limit for these Swingin’ Heroes in a pulse pounding collection of superhero prose fiction unlike anything you’ve ever seen before!

The wait is over Mechanoid Mavens!
You can get you Kindle copy now at AMAZON, and the print copy soon!

Sunday, November 1, 2015

PROGRESS REPORT: WEEK ENDING OCTOBER 31, 2015

FIRST OFF...
I hope everyone had a safe and happy Halloween.
I also hope that those who needed to remembered to set the clocks back one hour, since Daylight Savings Time ended overnight.
If you didn't, at least you'll really be on time wherever you have to go today.

NOW THEN...
I finished formatting and proofreading that anthology for my friendly neighborhood beta/proofreader Nancy Hansen; so I'm back working on ALPHA, BOOK 2: WAYWARD SON.

Writer's cap
At this point, still not sure if Chapter 19 (the one in progress) or Chapter 20 will be the last one.
Unfortunately, I lost Thursday to a cardiologist's appointment, but I have my writer's hat back on now and intend to have this manuscript finished by Thanksgiving.
Of course, I'll still have to give it its final "once over" to make sure the entire story reads as one coherent novel instead of a disjointed start/stop/restart project. But I'll cross that bridge when I come to it.



I have been told that everyone involved at Mechanoid Press is hard at work preparing THE SUPER SWINGIN' HERO 1968 SPECIAL that I helped visionary Jim Beard with for release, and that the Tommy Hancock Benefit anthology: LEGENDS OF NEW PULP FICTION is doing well at Airship 27.
Only the latter is scheduled for actual release before the end of 2015 at the moment, but I'm looking forward to both projects being available to the public when ready.
I had a great time participating in both anthologies, and Jim Beard has already shared some thoughts on a potential sequel to 1968 with me, so I'm truly looking forward to working with him again.

Meantime, I better get back to writing.
Take care, and I'll see you around the Internet.
Lee Houston, Junior
1 November, 2015