I have issued a new edition of Storm Approaching, the first book in the
MERCENARIES series. The main change is simply an increase in the font size,
since some readers have suggested the 10-point type was a bit small. The book
now has 353 pages instead of 260 but the word count is almost the same. However,
I made small changes throughout, and one chapter (16, “Eloquence”) was
extensively revised. Storm Approaching
is available both in print as an an e-book.
Friday, July 5, 2019
Monday, December 31, 2018
A Good Read To Lean Upon
The dawn of a New Year--may it be a
happy one for you!--is a good time to remind visitors that the main purpose of
this blog is to advertise my literary efforts. I have self-published six books.
Chief among them are the four volumes of the MERCENARIES series:
II: Gold and Glory
III: Resolution
IV: The Free Lands
The first three are a connected series;
the fourth is a stand-alone, but should be read only after reading the first
three.
How to sum them up? This blog contains
excerpts and other information, but here is a poem about Volume One:
No magic swords or mighty rings,
No orphans who are really kings,No elves or dwarfs or prophecies;
No ghouls or vampires, if you please.
A mercenary regiment,
Its men (and women), where it’s sent;
Its training, tactics, work, and play;
A growing threat (still far away);
That’s Storm Approaching. KIndly look
At this self-published, worthwhile book.
And
Gladly Teach, a satirical novel about a fictional
boarding school, and
Hodgepodge,
a collection of humorous essays on many topics.
Friday, December 21, 2018
There Is Nothing New Under The Sun
Reading Gibbon’s Decline and Fall, I found this about the Emperor Julian (361-363 AD): “... he could employ his hand to write, his ear to listen, and his voice to dictate; and pursue three separate trains of ideas without hesitation and without error.” Who says that multitasking is something that came in with computers?? The Romans gave us that, too! :-)
Thursday, December 20, 2018
Prescience?
-------------------------------
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all! And remember, as you plan your reading for 2019, that my six books--details of which are available here--would provide you with many hours of delight. :-)
Monday, November 12, 2018
Amo, Amas, Amat?
When I was a lad, the Jesuits in charge of my high school
education thought it good that I take four years of Latin. So I took four years
of Latin. I cannot say that I enjoyed it, nor that I was a great Latin scholar.
(I scored 100 on my very first Latin test; I recall that because it never
happened again on any subsequent Latin test.) But since I ended up becoming a writer,
and a historian with a strong interest in Ancient History—although that is not
my main field; I am not a Classical scholar—I am grateful to the Society of
Jesus for giving me a good foundation in Latin. Some knowledge of Latin is
indeed, as the reverend fathers told me, a very good thing for those who write,
and love, English.
I imagine that the reaction to this essay, at least among
those not versed in history, will be that modern Latin instruction, with Marcus
and Marcia cavorting on dad’s latifundium,
is far superior to that which was forced on those of my generation. But… but…
well… Roman history is something I taught, and have studied, for many years.
And, you know, I have to say that what I was given in high school was a more
accurate rendition of the Romans than any prettified contemporary stuff. The Romans did not build an empire by being
nice, and their customs were not ours. Maybe the new Latin programs should
feature Marcus killing some hostages or Marcia being told at age thirteen that
she is going to marry a man in his thirties.
Thursday, November 8, 2018
Can You Do The Math?
Everyone
needs a few good items of clothing, so, although the bulk of my haberdashery
comes from Walmart, I occasionally purchase more respectable habiliments from
Charles Tyrwhitt, a fine English supplier with offices in the U.S. Consequently
I am on their e-mail list and periodically receive advertisements.
Last
week their ad announced “three shirts for $99.95”. (These are very good shirts,
so this would be a bargain if I needed shirts.) And the advertisement also
displayed, below the price, a large circular insertion that said, “That’s only
$33.32 per shirt”. Yes, it really said that.
My
mind yet boggles. It would surely be reasonable for Charles Tyrwhitt to posit
that their clients have at least completed grade school. Nonetheless, the
company feels it advisable to tell prospective customers that ninety-nine
divided by three is thirty-three.
We
hear about the ‘dumbing-down’ of life. How bad is it? Have we reached the point
where companies selling fairly high-end products think we are all idiots? Could
they not assume that even mathematically-untalented people--such as me--can
handle elementary arithmetic?
O
tempora! O mores! (What times! What customs!) as Cicero said (although he was
referring to the conspiracy of Catiline rather than advertisements for togas).
Indeed, one could continue quoting from the First Catilinian: Quo usque tandem
abutere patientia nostra? (How long will you continue to abuse our patience?).
Companies will perhaps sell more products if they do not insult the
intelligence of their patrons.
Friday, May 11, 2018
SALAD DAYS
As
I strolled along the grocery store aisle, intent on selecting a new salad
dressing, I marvelled at the benefits of the free market. In the fierce
competition of the marketplace, dozens upon dozens of contestants for my
pocketbook presented themselves, each hoping to find a home in my cupboard. “Let a hundred flowers bloom, let a hundred schools of thought contend” said
Chairman Mao; but that seems quite tame compared with how many salad dressings
contend under capitalism. How many there are!
In fact, there may be a few too many… how to choose…
Oh,
well. Back to Newman’s Own.
Suddenly
my scrutinizing eye beheld a bottle whose label proclaimed “Calorie Free, Sugar Free, Fat Free,
Carbohydrate Free, Gluten Free, Cholesterol Free. 100% Guaranteed”.
I
wondered if it was a bottle of air. But no, inside was indeed a glutinous mass
of Honey Dijon Dressing. And around its long neck was a card, which I read
further: “Save 10,000 calories a month.” “Lose 34 pounds a year!”
Hmmm…
I hesitated. Although I am about five pounds above my desired weight, losing 34
pounds would reduce me to a wraith, an ethereal effigy whom my friends would
not recognize.
Perhaps,
I thought, I can use it for only eight weeks, thus losing those five pounds?
Or… or maybe this marvelous elixir will enable me to eat lots of chocolate,
snack crackers, and ice cream, thus compensating for the reduction brought
about by the dressing? What a notion: a garnish that enables one to eat more
while not gaining weight!
How
could I resist? This is the best nostrum since the one sold by Dr. Dulcamara in
Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore! The bottle of Walden Farms salad
dressing must go home with me.
Only
later, as my initial euphoria faded somewhat, did I slowly come to see that
there might be a flaw in my reasoning.
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